Join Marty and Matt as they talk with Jeremy Riss, an alien scientist, about some of the craziest things the U.S. government has done in the past, including the JFK assassination, the alleged discovery of UFO technology, and more.
00:01:11.000There's a lot of interesting questions about how it is that someone comes out and claims they have, say, potentially warp drive-like sci-fi technology.
00:01:39.000There was a program where they're working on exosuits, Iron Man suits.
00:01:42.000And as we know, because this news broke a few months ago, China has actually been genetically engineering people to make them super soldiers.
00:01:50.000Those are very serious topics, and we have some less serious topics we'll talk about later tonight.
00:01:56.000There's another big breaking story where some kid Apparently was doing a prank, I'm doing air quotes right now for those that can't see, where he walked up to a bunch of people with butcher knives in Nashville.
00:02:06.000And do you have any idea what happened?
00:02:08.000Yeah, the dude pulled out his gun and fatally shot the kid because you don't approach someone with a butcher knife.
00:02:13.000So we'll definitely talk about this and a bunch of other crazy stories.
00:02:16.000We are being joined today by none other than the alien scientist.
00:02:20.000Mr. Alien Scientist, do you want to introduce yourself?
00:02:22.000Yeah, my name is Jeremy Riss and I'm from Mansfield, Mass.
00:02:28.000I grew up in southeastern Massachusetts.
00:02:30.000I lived in Boston for a couple years and now I'm kind of living in Rhode Island.
00:02:34.000You were talking to us about crazy technology.
00:02:36.000You named 15 elements in a row just for me to prove you knew your elements.
00:02:43.000Right, so I've got a degree in physics.
00:02:46.000I went to State University in Massachusetts and I've always been interested in science since I was in high school.
00:02:53.000I think I read a book by Richard Feynman called Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman.
00:02:58.000And Richard Feynman was probably one of the greatest physicists ever.
00:03:02.000He was recruited out of MIT at age 18 to go work on the Manhattan Project.
00:03:07.000So it got me really interested in physics and classified programs and classified physics research and just the idea that there's smart people out there that know stuff that other people don't.
00:03:18.000So not only do you have a general understanding of a lot of these stories about government tech, you also seem to be well-versed in some of the more crazy, out-there conspiracies, too.
00:03:26.000But you seem to be a bit of a skeptic on that, I guess.
00:03:35.000I think that there's some value in looking at alternative history and alternative ways of looking at our world around us, and I think we need to be open-minded.
00:03:45.000But also use the right tools and have the right tools.
00:03:49.000But it will be fun to talk about the really kooky conspiracies too, just because they're fun to think about.
00:04:24.000I'm just saying it's, you know, conspiracy fact, which I'm very happy we're talking about.
00:04:29.000Also, with the latest technological advancement news, Bitcoin is having a pretty good day to say the least.
00:04:36.000A lot of people who listened to me a couple of years ago are very happy.
00:04:39.000And if you want to listen to me, check me out by signing up on my email list by going to wearechange.org in the top right hand corner and signing up.
00:04:47.000I'm gonna give a shout out to Max Keiser, because when Bitcoin hit like 30k, I tweeted, if you had all listened to Max Keiser in 2012, you would all be billionaires right now.
00:04:58.000Because he was legit, it was like, you know what, 2012 you have Bitcoin at like a dollar, two dollars, and Max is saying, buy Bitcoin, buy Bitcoin.
00:05:51.000He tweeted that picture of him as that Lion King character holding up Simba, and it's him holding up Doge, and he was like, you're welcome.
00:05:59.000I'm super happy Jeremy's here, because there's a lot of complicated technology we talk about on the show from time to time, and I feel like we can only get so far without actually being scientists, so it's nice to have a scientist in the house.
00:06:09.000Well, we also have had a bunch of these stories come out, like in December, the super soldiers in China, the genetic engineering.
00:06:14.000And then we had the story last week where, you know, we ended up doing this members only segment about UFOs and this technology.
00:06:20.000And so we'll bring in somebody who is, you know, you know, looked into this a bit more.
00:06:39.000There are people who have commented on these posts saying, why would I become a member when I've already watched this for free?
00:06:46.000These are exclusive members-only posts, so the videos that are up in the members-only section, you can only watch if you're a member on the website, or I guess a hacker who's stolen the videos, but good for you if you figured it out, I guess.
00:07:07.000They're getting rid of tons of channels.
00:07:08.000They're, they're nuking people who talk about certain issues.
00:07:11.000Certainly we talk about issues that, you know, YouTube doesn't like, and we try and make sure we do it in a way where we can, you know, kind of get around, you know, what they want to, you know, they want to nuke you, but we're, we're careful, but it'll eventually come.
00:07:23.000That way, in the event we do get purged, you'll still be able to find us and it helps support the show.
00:07:28.000Also, don't forget to like, share, subscribe, hit the notification bell, and tell everybody if you really do like this podcast, spread the word.
00:08:19.000Forbes writes, when Dr. Salvatore Cesar Paez, an aerospace engineer at the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division, filed a patent for a plasma compression fusion device in 2019, It was either a giant breakthrough or mad science.
00:08:35.000According to the patent application, the miniature device could contain and sustain fusion reactions capable of generating power in the gigawatt, one billion watts, or two terawatt, one trillion watts range or more.
00:08:46.000A large coal plant or mid-sized nuclear power reactor by comparison produces energy in the one to two gigawatt range.
00:08:53.000The revolutionary invention by Dr. Paez, if real, would produce near unlimited clean energy from something no larger than a sports utility vehicle.
00:09:03.000Dr. Paez's fusion device is among a handful of outlandish technologies dubbed the UFO patents that have in some shape or form been pursued by the U.S.
00:09:13.000I'm going to mention that this guy says he's written before with some skepticism over Dr. Paez's purported compact fusion reactor.
00:09:20.000The physicist appears to have bona fide credentials, including a PhD from Carnegie Mellon, and published some of his work, while much is presumably classified.
00:09:29.000He's been employed by the Pentagon for decades, and this isn't the first patent filed in his name, and all of them appear centered around what he calls the Paez effect.
00:09:37.000Dr. Paez posits that by controlling the accelerated spin, or vibration, of electrically charged matter, high-energy electromagnetic fields can be produced.
00:09:48.000One proposed use for such fields is an electromagnetic field generator, device which would be applied to alter the trajectory of Earth-bound asteroids over a period of time.
00:09:56.000While the patent makes clear that such a device would work only on small asteroids of under roughly 100 meters in length or less, it isn't hard to grasp the interest of any defense agency in providing contingencies for such a scenario.
00:10:10.000They say his Inertial Mass Reduction Device is one of the most extraordinary patents This technology suggests manipulation of quantum field fluctuations, which could reduce a vehicle's inertial and gravitational mass, allowing it to travel at hitherto unseen speeds.
00:10:28.000The reason the speed of light is something of a universal speed limit is that mass increases to infinite as one reaches it.
00:10:34.000Demanding infinite energy to continue moving.
00:10:36.000The ability to reduce mass could have incredible implications for the futures of space travel.
00:10:41.000Only faster than light speeds of travel would allow humanity to venture outside the solar system.
00:10:49.000They're going to mention he's got a high-temperature superconductor, and last but not least, a high-frequency gravitational wave generator.
00:10:57.000Now, all this sounds like magic, to be completely honest.
00:10:59.000I can read through this, and it just sounds like science fiction.
00:11:29.000So it says right in there in the article by, by, um, it's Tyler Rogoway and Brett Tingley of the drive.com.
00:11:35.000They, they've been doing a lot of great reporting on some of these, you know, technologies that are being declassified and stuff.
00:11:41.000Um, this one's for a particular interest, um, thing about the, the pays thing, right.
00:11:46.000Is it, what really confuses me is that, that they, I know they've spent more than $500,000 investigating this, that, you know, they spent 500 million to build a rail gun for the Navy.
00:11:58.000If they're really interested in this technology, they're going to be spending more than half a million.
00:12:29.000I was just reading the book downstairs on the Pentagon's brain, which is DARPA, and the way they do things is they get subject matter experts, or people who are looking into these kinds of things, and then they give them funding for their research.
00:12:43.000That's how these projects are picked up.
00:12:45.000They find guys like Pace, who wrote his thesis on this very interesting thesis paper on bubble reactions and his theory of warping space-time, and so they funded him.
00:12:56.000But I know that this is not the only research that's been done on this.
00:13:00.000The research on this goes back to the mid-1990s to a guy named Bernard Heche, who worked at Caltech University.
00:13:07.000And he had a contract with Lockheed Martin, Skunk Works, and wrote a bunch of papers with Hal Puthoff and a number of other gentlemen back in the mid-90s on this sort of space-time metric warping theory of inertia and of what mass is and how to get mass and momentum and how to alter those things using refractive indexes of materials and stuff like that.
00:13:33.000So there's been some research going on to this that goes back quite a ways that's less talked about than sort of this stuff.
00:13:52.000And in fact, you know, they might change a couple things in the patent to make the technology inoperable or not give out secrets.
00:13:58.000We have to look at that part about, you know, where it said they got the patents granted through warning of similar Chinese advances.
00:14:06.000And when we look at those similar Chinese advances, I sent you guys two papers in particular on that list that I sent you, two of the papers that were written by Chinese universities and a lot of Chinese researchers on this, and it's related to what are called optical phenomena and squeeze states.
00:14:26.000So they take a parametric generator, they oscillate it at twice the resonant frequency and it creates these squeezed states.
00:14:41.000What it means is that if we take a photon plus a photon, the Feynman diagram for that, it annihilates and that's where we get our graviton from.
00:14:48.000So we know that gravity is an interaction of photons and the way that photons interact with matter.
00:14:55.000And that they're trying to change this through a warping of the refractive index of light around these materials.
00:15:01.000So they're trying to make stuff float?
00:15:29.000And they said if you gave, I don't know why they chose this guy, Christopher Columbus, a nuclear submarine and infinite resources, they would never figure out how to reproduce it.
00:15:41.000I remember hearing that kind of conversation on the Joe Rogan podcast with Bob Lazar, and he was specifically talking about some of the technological advancements that we're kind of hinting at here.
00:15:51.000And what you said, I was actually thinking, not the smart part, but the part specifically Uh, about if the U.S.
00:15:57.000government had such technology, why would they release it to the public?
00:16:02.000It would be counterintuitive for them to do this, especially if they had something that was advanced, good, useful.
00:16:08.000I think this most likely, in my own personal opinion, is a part of either one, a larger PSYOP against countries like China, against countries like Russia.
00:16:17.000Or two, a larger call for other scientists to come in and say, hey, we're working on this.
00:16:45.000With technological advancements, we can't even conceive where the future's going to go, just like Christopher Columbus couldn't utilize a nuclear submarine.
00:16:55.000It's the idea of a cell phone in Rome.
00:17:21.000It's like higher-tier classified stuff.
00:17:24.000But I'll mention there's a funny scene in the movie The Men Who Stare at Goats.
00:17:27.000So Luke mentioned The Men Who Stare at Goats.
00:17:30.000And then I ended up watching the movie, which is more of a comedy than anything.
00:17:33.000But there's a funny scene where there's like one dude is talking to his commanding officer and he's like, we need to start a psychological, a psychic spy unit.
00:18:13.000So when you look at, you know, the military industrial complex, that is pretty much the key of private enterprise that's working in a quasi government way, just like the Federal Reserve is working with all the big banks in this kind of quasi way.
00:18:26.000But in reality, you know, there's also fears of a lot of this technology being leaked, a lot of this technology being sold to the highest bidder, especially when it's just in contractor And there were fears of that in the Manhattan Project, too, but now a 12-year-old can go and look up how to make an atomic bomb.
00:18:40.000That doesn't mean they can have one, though.
00:18:51.000And the way that the Manhattan Project came about, they had hundreds of thousands of people working on it, and only I believe a dozen people knew what was happening there.
00:19:00.000A lot of people are saying, you know, conspiracies aren't true, but if you look at the way the Manhattan Project, which by the way was also forged at the Bohemian Grove, the way that was kind of created with so many people involved, all these people, majority people, not knowing what they were working on and building this nuclear weapon, And we have to understand, we're moving towards a new technological era where we're building something that's going to be way more powerful than nuclear weapons, that's going to have way more severe of an impact, and the implications here are severe, to say the least.
00:19:29.000When you're talking about refractive index and action, so talking about the warp drive, what they're building, would you call it a warp drive?
00:19:42.000So I'm working with a group right now to try to, you know, bring these scientists out and bring more information out of the woodwork on this.
00:19:49.000Because we look at what's in the public sphere.
00:19:51.000We got Sal Pays and him talking about these U.S.
00:19:55.000But I know for a fact that there is more research that's been done into this.
00:19:58.000And I have a huge list of scientist names who have worked on all kinds of this stuff.
00:20:03.000So what we've done is we've kind of created our conference.
00:20:06.000We actually got a hold of all these email lists.
00:20:08.000I've been tracking down these people for the past decade and following a lot of their work, because this is what I've been into, is all this type of research.
00:20:15.000You know, where does DARPA go to recruit their next projects out of?
00:20:19.000They go to these conferences where these PhDs and these scientists go and present ideas.
00:20:23.000And then they pick the best ones to fund.
00:20:27.000So I've kind of like gone over a lot of that research and we got actually all those DARPA email lists and we just emailed all those people and we invited them to our own conference.
00:20:39.000This guy Tim Ventura, AmericanAntigravity.com out in California, he kind of got me into researching antigravity back in like 2002.
00:20:47.000And now we're working together to try to, we have a conference where we're actually bringing people out of the woodwork to come and talk about what they worked on because most of it's declassified now and it's becoming so out there and well known and it has such great implications for the whole future of our planet that more people are coming out with it.
00:21:06.000You mentioned something interesting before we started the show that you have this guy, Dr. Pace or Pace or however you pronounce it, that he's got a bunch of patents that are kind of all over the place.
00:21:16.000Like an individual would focus on one specific thing, but he's got a bunch of different things, right?
00:21:20.000So we consult subject matter experts because it's the information is too voluminous for any one person to have just massive knowledge of all this stuff.
00:21:27.000So we consult like people who are really into a certain subject.
00:21:31.000But the fact that he published a nuclear reactor and this space-time warping thing, condensed matter physics and nuclear physics, it kind of gives a hint that it might be technology that the U.S.
00:21:51.000But I would imagine that if this was developed by U.S.
00:21:55.000science of some sort, they no longer need it.
00:21:57.000They've developed something substantially more powerful.
00:21:59.000And now they're like, OK, let's give it to the civilians and then see what they do with it.
00:22:02.000And then, you know, they'll ramp up production and they'll fix things or whatever.
00:22:06.000Using the patent itself, could we replicate if you're saying change the refractive?
00:22:10.000And from what I understand, we talked earlier is you have a material like a spacecraft hull.
00:22:15.000You hit it with acoustic vibration and then you hit it with a laser to change the refractive index of the material.
00:22:21.000There's a lot of different experiments we're trying and a lot of different theories.
00:22:23.000The problem is that we have almost too many theories at this point about how it works, and we're at this kind of standstill in physics where we're working with these quantum gravity researchers, guys who are trying to work on unifying general relativity and quantum field theory to create a theory of everything, essentially, like Stephen Wolfram's doing and some of these other guys, Garrett Lisey and Eric Weinstein.
00:23:22.000It's ways that shapes and different types of polygons and things fit together.
00:23:27.000It's like the subtle, innate geometry, and they found that when they build this puzzle of it, they create this thing that looks very much like particle physics and mimics a lot of these things, but they haven't put all the pieces together yet.
00:23:39.000But I want to say that when we do have a theory of everything, we're going to have anti-gravity.
00:23:45.000We're going to be able to understand exactly how gravity works.
00:23:48.000But a theory of everything, wouldn't that allow us to basically build anything?
00:23:52.000Like if we understand how everything works, we'll know the confines of the universe.
00:23:57.000And that's the thing that they talk about with Jack.
00:23:59.000So Jack Follet, he's a scientist that's been studying, you know, aliens really for decades now.
00:24:07.000And he's come out with this new thing with a guy named Dr. Gary Nolan, where they're actually taking pieces of alleged Roswell material and these alleged alien materials that people have recovered or have out there.
00:24:19.000And I'm sure there's people out there with these materials and bringing them to laboratories and analyzing them with this approach where they can actually like look at the isotopes.
00:24:29.000And what he said is that, you know, instead of working with, you know, a hundred and,
00:24:33.000you know, 90 something elements like we work with in our periodic table, they work with
00:24:37.000all the isotopes of all these elements in between.
00:24:40.000So they're working with like 200 puzzle pieces rather than building stuff with only 90 pieces.
00:24:45.000What would be an example of an isotope?
00:24:46.000So an isotope is just, so you have atomic number.
00:24:50.000That's what goes up on the periodic table.
00:24:51.000That's the number of protons in your nucleus.
00:24:54.000And that gives you your properties of the charge and the properties of the atom.
00:24:59.000Then you have something called neutron number, and the neutrons are kind of stabilize the nucleus, and you can kind of like throw a couple extra neutrons in, and it doesn't change the charge, so it doesn't change the fundamental properties of the thing, it just makes it a little bit heavier.
00:25:13.000And when it's a little bit heavier, its quantum spins are a little bit more slow and sluggish.
00:25:18.000And so that kind of affects some of the properties of these things.
00:25:22.000And there's weird things that have happened.
00:25:24.000One of the examples is they prove that our brains actually work on quantum phenomena.
00:25:30.000That quantum phenomena is active in our brain.
00:25:32.000Because if we give people lithium salts, but we use a different isotopic version of lithium, it has a slightly different spin ratio and it affects people adversely with their behaviors.
00:25:42.000And so that proves that there's some quantum mechanical process in the brain that's affected by this different, this heavier... By the spin of the... By the quantum behaviors of these particles.
00:25:52.000And they're even finding that birds are able to tell magnetic north through a molecule called cryptochrome that exists inside of their retinas.
00:26:01.000It's literally a molecule in their eye that's super sensitive to these differences in spins.
00:26:08.000And one side will spin differently in a magnetic field, and that's the molecule that they're using, that scientists have identified birds as using, to tell where magnetic fields are.
00:26:17.000So I want to go back to this idea that this one dude shouldn't know all this stuff.
00:26:23.000And there's more people that do know it.
00:26:25.000And what we're doing is we set up a conference to kind of bring these people out of the woodwork, and we say, look, if you know something, come to APEC and present.
00:26:33.000We give you an hour to present your topic, and then we have an hour Q&A where we have PhDs, we have DARPA people that show up in our conference and cross-analyze and examine these people.
00:26:43.000So it's kind of like Project Veritas, but for science.
00:26:47.000I like the Orion project or the Disclosure project, but just for science, you know.
00:26:52.000So let me ask then, do you think, in your opinion, you know a lot about these scientists and things they're working on, do you think that the US and China both have extremely advanced technology we've never even conceived of?
00:27:05.000I don't think we have it yet because the missing puzzle piece I really see is kind of like the atomic bomb.
00:27:11.000You can't build an atomic bomb without, you know, refineries and without centrifuges and stuff.
00:27:15.000That's why Stuxnet targeted Iran and the thing going on in Iran.
00:27:29.000So that kind of bums me out, because I want to just, you know, want to believe, right?
00:27:32.000But the Chinese, yeah, the Chinese, I think, are significantly more advanced than us in this area.
00:27:38.000In fact, those two patents that I gave you just shows how much research they've been doing into this, these optical materials, and these metamaterials and, and some of these.
00:27:49.000And what would they need to build the machine to produce this effect?
00:27:54.000I think it's going to take a consolidated effort of a lot of different people because we're going to need material scientists who are going to take advice from our physicists who tell them, this is the kind of materials I need.
00:28:47.000You watch the movie, and his dad was doing all these science experiments.
00:28:51.000He was taking DNA and taking little strips of DNA off all these different animals, like the starfish regeneration thing, these exoskeletons from these crabs and stuff.
00:29:02.000And then he injected himself with this thing.
00:29:15.000No, I think the original Incredible Hulk was when we discovered, we started messing around with radiation and radioactive waves and things like that.
00:29:25.000I was just talking with Andreas about all the stuff hidden in duck tales in Disney cartoons and stuff.
00:29:32.000It's kind of amazing when you look back at some of these ideas that they had for the future in science fiction in these comic books back then.
00:29:39.000For instance, Captain America's shield was made out of this vibranium.
00:29:44.000And, you know, there's some kind of truth to these kinds of things.
00:30:00.000So hafnium is, if you look up the hafnium controversy, you'll find that hafnium can be used to create gamma ray lasers and also EMP devices and stuff.
00:30:10.000And there was like, there's some controversy concerning that.
00:30:13.000But Captain America's shield absorbs all of the energy and displaces it.
00:30:17.000That's like the idea of his shield, right?
00:30:19.000So one of the things they did with hafnium is they actually used it in the H-bomb.
00:30:24.000So one of the guys that was working on that, John Wheeler and Teller, Edward Teller, they basically designed the inner core of the H-bomb to be a hafnium mirror that would basically, a gamma ray laser that would reflect all these rays back in on itself.
00:30:40.000And that's part of the mechanism for how the hydrogen bomb worked.
00:30:45.000Was that it used hafnium in its construction?
00:30:48.000And that was that's sort of like a little bit related because it literally takes all this energy absorbs it and then releases it all at once Which is very similar.
00:30:56.000That's like that's like Black Panther's suit in the movie.
00:30:58.000Yeah, exactly Yeah, it's really interesting looking back at you know, Hollywood and entertainment just a few decades ago trying to kind of Envision what the future is some of them, you know hit the nail on the head to me in my opinion demolition, man Got a lot of things right nailed it including calls.
00:31:14.000I I think they're the ones that like first kind of did that but but other ones obviously are very wrong.
00:31:19.000I'm still waiting for the three seashells.
00:31:26.000I mean it's already in effect somewhat.
00:31:28.000If you curse, you get a fine automatically.
00:31:31.000But then he walks up, it prints a ticket, so he just starts swearing and then he rips it and goes to the bathroom with it.
00:31:36.000If we, if we, if we curse, we're going to lose our monetization as well.
00:31:39.000So, uh, so there's other things that, you know, are right, aren't right.
00:31:42.000But from your kind of perspective, especially from your conferences, what are some of the things presented that you saw that you could speak about that are truly inspiring or the most eyeopening to you?
00:32:08.000There's been a lot of interesting presenters, but I almost feel like the best is yet to come.
00:32:13.000Because the people that really know the stuff, we've had a lot of these guys show up and they're like, look, I worked on a lot of this stuff in classified programs.
00:32:36.000And then he worked at Maison Physics Facility for a brief time in 81.
00:32:40.000He said that he saw like this, this like machine, like it was like an object where he couldn't get his hands, like it was a force field almost, something like that.
00:32:46.000Do you think that guy was telling the truth?
00:32:48.000Well, I've done a lot of investigations into Bob.
00:32:52.000Actually, a friend of mine named Dan Benkert, about 50 minutes north of here in PA, he did a lot of this research and he's really good friends with John Lear and George Knapp and all those guys from the original story and stuff.
00:33:05.000And the Bob Lazar case is an interesting case, but we've done a ton of research on it.
00:33:11.000And, you know, we'd look at the actionable intelligence and the science and stuff.
00:33:16.000And, you know, what we call element 115 in this in sort of our jargon is what's called unobtainium.
00:33:22.000And unobtainium is like saying that, oh, well, you can have antigravity, but it's this element that can only be created in supernovas and really, really far galaxies.
00:33:30.000And we can't create it in our You know, labs and stuff.
00:33:33.000It's basically saying that, yeah, you can have anti-gravity, but you need this high-hanging fruit that you'll never, ever reach, is kind of the idea with that Element 115 story.
00:33:53.000You know, anyone who can add So I heard that there's a... I was just reading... Sorry, I want to go back on Bob Lazar, but Bob Lazar, we'd like to invite Bob actually to APEC, you know, because I've never seen Bob give an interview with any scientist.
00:34:07.000He's never given interviews with physicists.
00:34:08.000It's always like, it always seems like the interviews he does gives are controlled and all the questions are pre-screened and stuff.
00:34:14.000No way, Joe, prescreen any of that stuff.
00:34:20.000I had a lot of people, like, saying that, oh, he's involved with a deal with Netflix and that he's getting paid to promote this because, let's face it, after Bob Islar was on Joe Rogan, his film on Netflix got, like, a million hits.
00:34:57.000They put Bob in a situation where they know that Joe as a layman is going to ask only safe questions based on what he's seen on the TV.
00:35:02.000It's really curious that he got an opportunity right after he came out in the early 90s to present before Stanford University to a team of physicists and he turned that down.
00:35:13.000He also initially said that there was an alien.
00:35:24.000I feel like they wanted to feed this guy disinformation.
00:35:27.000They had him working on, like, high-tech drones that they had recovered from Tesla Tech, or that they'd been working on since they raided Tesla's office.
00:35:46.000Well, like I was just saying, the joke from The Men Who Stare at Goats, where it's like, the Russians think we did it because the French started a rumor, and then we denied it, but they think we're lying.
00:35:55.000It's like, with Bob Lazar, he tells this story, for those unfamiliar with this story, there's a documentary about it, many of you are probably familiar with it, it's on Joe Rogan, and he talked about how he saw all of this tech, this crazy technology, anti-grav, saw aliens, and then later said, well, is that maybe a puppet or something?
00:36:09.000But many people speculate, what if it was a Potemkin research base?
00:36:14.000That the idea was, bring in this contractor, bring in a bunch of them, show them very ridiculous magic tricks, tell them it's real so they believe it, and then wait for one of them to leak it.
00:36:24.000That way, our enemies at the time, Russia, the Soviet Union, would hear the U.S.
00:36:30.000Better not attack them, because they got anti-grav and they're working with the aliens.
00:36:33.000Do you know the Russians, after Bob Lazar came out, they spent about a billion dollars looking into element 115 and trying to create super-heavy elements?
00:37:24.000Well, I'm just saying disinformation is something that the US government uses many times, and they steer scientists, tell them they're working on one thing when they're working on another.
00:37:58.000There's a lot of details involved and stuff.
00:38:00.000And like I said, we go after actionable intelligence.
00:38:03.000The research I did into S4, I found that there's no evidence of a base at Papoose Lake.
00:38:08.000We have the satellite photos of the facility that has never been touched.
00:38:12.000going back decades, so that we haven't found evidence of a base at Papoose Lake, but we did find a Site 4, which is at Tonopah Test Range, which is like literally right next to Area 51.
00:38:21.000So on a lot of these maps that show like Area 51 and S4, they're really talking about Site 4, which is at Tonopah, which is where a ton of these, you know, electronic countermeasures and other technologies were worked on.
00:38:33.000This is where, you know, they built and flew the F-117 and the stealth fighter and the bombers and stuff.
00:38:39.000I saw a story not that long ago, maybe a couple months ago, and it was talking about these strange sightings of strange vehicles appearing near a naval base.
00:38:48.000And the funny thing was, it was like, you know, these soldiers are saying they see it, and they're reporting when they're doing these training missions, they see these strange craft, and now they're publishing it, and everyone's like, this is it, there's aliens.
00:38:59.000And then they casually mention in all these articles that only, you know, 70 miles away is an advanced naval research base.
00:39:13.000And they're not high enough security clearance to know what it is, so they record it.
00:39:16.000And then why is it that so many higher-ups would dismiss the stories initially?
00:39:20.000Because the stories apparently was that they were finally now going to take these claims seriously in case it was a security threat.
00:39:26.000Well, listen, if you're higher up and then you hear a story where it's like, I saw a crazy vehicle and you're thinking to yourself, yeah, the research base is 50 miles away.
00:40:07.000And he was working on exactly what you're talking about, microwave-propelled craft, where they actually fire... It was called Project Skyvault.
00:40:15.000And they fire microwaves at beamed craft and light craft.
00:40:20.000And they're able to, like... And they developed this into a technology where they can actually, like, blast these and ionize the air surfaces flowing across wings of aircraft so they can literally move the aircraft and take control of the aircraft by like warping the air currents around the aircraft themselves.
00:40:35.000So they can take control of like, there's a whole patent we have on taking control of an enemy aircraft using this microwave lasers to ionize the gas of the air going across their wings to disrupt its flight.
00:40:46.000And then also there's what are called phase-conjugate mirrors, which are really strange optical property, and they have radar-absorbent paint made out of these kinds of materials.
00:40:58.000In fact, the paint that they used on the stealth fighters was actually a metamaterial made of barium titanate, and they actually mixed it in the paint so that it was radar-absorbent.
00:41:09.000I thought the goal of stealth was that it looked like a bird.
00:41:13.000Right, it's that cross-sectional, they basically, the goal is they took that formula for the cross-sectional radar area of a object and they figured out how to minimize the parts of it in that equation to make things disappear.
00:41:26.000And one of the things that they found was like that the flat areas and also they, well the V2 was built actually by these two German scientists or aviation guys.
00:41:39.000There was a team of brothers and they built the flying wing, the first flying wing.
00:41:45.000And it was actually like, they were calling it German stealth technology because actually the stealth was actually a byproduct.
00:41:52.000It wasn't actually an intentional part of the design.
00:41:54.000They just, because they built a flying wing, it didn't have that long fuselage and that long, because that's where the radar was bouncing off of on their planes, they found.
00:42:02.000So they did a lot of research into radar and radar signal returns.
00:42:05.000And that's a lot of the research that was actually done out at Area 51.
00:42:09.000And it was headed by the CIA under a project called Project Rainbow, which was headed by a guy named Edward Mills Purcell.
00:42:15.000And Edward Mills Purcell was a physicist who won the Nobel Prize in the 60s for discovering nuclear magnetic resonance.
00:42:23.000And the fact that atoms are basically like spinning magnets, and they have resonances, and they have different rotations.
00:42:47.000You know, I said, why can't a 12-year-old have a nuclear bomb?
00:42:50.000You said you gotta have the factories, the refineries.
00:42:52.000So that means, it's not necessarily true, but when we're looking for the production of hovercrafts and UFOs and spaceships and alien tech, You'd see the factories and the industry.
00:43:42.000I mean, I think it's in the realm of possibility, but going back to World War II in Germany,
00:43:46.000German scientists were working on some pretty crazy radical concepts.
00:43:50.000I believe, correct me if I'm wrong, there was even an image of a saucer that German scientists were trying to configure as a way to make it fly and make it as a flying object.
00:44:00.000But then, of course, we have to understand under Operation Paperclip, a lot of these top Nazi scientists, a lot of these German World War II scientists, were particularly taken From Germany, brought into the United States, brought into the CIA, brought into the Pentagon, brought into building the U.S.
00:44:51.000government, especially with what we know from acid and what we don't know from all the other kind of classified stuff that still is secret to us.
00:45:03.000So about the saucer theory about Germany.
00:45:06.000So the Germans actually were looking into something called the Thule Society and the Vril.
00:45:10.000Yes, I remember hearing of the Thule Society.
00:45:13.000And so the Germans had apparently some kind of top-secret research going on into these ideas.
00:45:18.000And of course the Germans were the ones who, you know, where quantum mechanics was born.
00:45:21.000You know, it was of course discovered in Italy.
00:45:24.000The first sustained nuclear reaction was done in Italy by Enrico Fermi.
00:45:29.000But a lot of the theory was laid down by German scientists like Heisenberg and Einstein, in fact.
00:45:34.000And it really lost Hitler the war because he went after the Jewish population because that drove out a lot of the most brilliant scientific minds of the time in Germany and caused those people to come to the U.S.
00:45:47.000And when we got Einstein and we got Heisenberg, it was like, All right, it's like we have all your brain power.
00:45:53.000This is what happens when you have an ideology-based society rather than a merit-based society.
00:45:59.000And I'm mentioning this because many people say what's happening right now, especially within the U.S.
00:46:04.000government, especially within the establishment, is pushing the ideology over merit.
00:46:11.000And all their best people are leaving, and they're coming to AIPAC and presenting all this information out to the public so that the public can have it.
00:46:16.000But the same thing happened in Germany, and Germany lost people like Einstein that, of course, decided to flee, rather than, of course, you know, this Italian regime.
00:46:43.000And you take a look—it's an extremist ideology as well—you take a look at what's going on in the U.S.
00:46:47.000with the rise of critical theory and how extreme that is, and There's probably going to be people who are in the United States or in China looking for places to escape to.
00:47:03.000I think we'll actually get to that point where people are looking at, say, you know, Joe Biden bringing back critical race theory training programs that Trump tried to get rid of.
00:47:12.000There may be a lot of people who don't want to be involved in this.
00:47:14.000They're going to quit their jobs and start their own companies or they're going to want to leave the country outright.
00:47:37.000But we have to understand the major epicenters, the major kind of places where people gather to build stuff, major cities, they're absolutely being eviscerated right now with lockdowns, which is preventing people from doing business.
00:48:54.000We're getting off the science subject stuff here, but David Hogg of Parkland Notoriety, no disrespect, I mean, that's a horrifying event, wants to start a pillow company to compete with Mike Lindell, who has my pillow.
00:49:10.000I could be wrong about this, but my understanding is that he's literally calling it our pillow.
00:49:16.000I'm, I know, I'm, I'm, yeah, I mean, I'm pretty sure he's calling it our pillow.
00:49:23.000He tweeted something about how, this is crazy, he tweeted how we needed union, factory that pays fair wages, and like California's out of the question.
00:50:35.000But when you talk about fusion, which gets roped into that same nuclear power thing, and it's really a completely different process, and maybe you shouldn't even call them both nuclear, though there is nuclear energy involved.
00:50:48.000Because we have all these ideas about what to clean, where to get the carbon from, what you gotta, the ropes you gotta drag, but we need a power source.
00:50:54.000But look, look, even at Elon Musk with Tesla now becoming, Tesla is worth more than all of the next top 10 auto manufacturers.
00:52:03.000Because when you see what's happening in China, especially with their promotion of masculinity, and then you have Chinese institutions and Chinese financial banks financing a lot of the colleges in the United States, they're promoting that masculinity is toxic.
00:52:16.000And when you look at this larger kind of spectrum that's unfolding here, you see China centralizing a lot of this for their own personal benefit.
00:52:24.000You see the United States centralizing it Not for their benefit, but for the benefit of the few elite that, of course, don't serve everyone else.
00:52:31.000And there's a big difference here with the elites in America also being the ones that are bankrolling China at the same time.
00:52:37.000A lot of people like to post about how Star Trek is communism.
00:53:03.000If we want to get to that point, it's not going to be through government authoritarianism and a command economy.
00:53:08.000It's going to be through smart people working really, really hard and people in general coming together to find new ways to do new things And unfortunately, you know, it's interesting.
00:53:20.000Ryan Long, he's the comedian, has this new segment out.
00:53:41.000That you've got people on the left weaponizing critical theory, which is a moral authoritarian dogma, which is going to restrict our ability to actually develop new technology and do new things.
00:53:50.000One of the biggest problems I've always had with the left, because I used to do fundraising for non-profits, One of them, I worked for several environmental nonprofits, and I immediately started researching, okay, climate change is a problem, right?
00:54:00.000Global warming is a problem, carbon emissions, all that stuff.
00:54:17.000Um, there's... I mean, I'm not going to get into all the science of it, but... Long story short, they're safer, they don't melt down, it's liquid, right?
00:54:28.000It's safer because you can use the fuel indefinitely, it doesn't have spent fuel rods, so there's not the waste problem that other fuels have, like we have at Yucca Mountain with all the reactor fuel.
00:54:39.000But so, here I am, and it's these exact environmental organizations saying no to nuclear energy.
00:54:53.000It's the same reason they took, like, an MRI machine, the same, I talked about Edward Mills personally, he invented NMRI, nuclear magnetic resonance, so what they use in an NMRI machine, an MRI machine, it's called an MRI machine because they took the N out.
00:55:06.000It's actually a nuclear magnetic resonance imaging machine.
00:55:09.000But they removed the word nuclear because People hear that word and they don't understand it.
00:55:14.000But all this is just the nucleus of an atom.
00:55:18.000It doesn't mean that it's nuclear fission or that it's nuclear active decay or radiation.
00:55:27.000So do we need like a Atlas Shrug type scenario where all the wealthy industrialists flee to a secret location to be free from the oppressive government?
00:55:42.000Making a ranch where we can build saucers.
00:55:44.000And isn't it kind of sad that our resources, our money, is being spent for destruction rather than building, rather than actually construction?
00:55:54.000If you look at where the majority of the scientific community, where you look at the majority of the money that goes into them, it goes into weapons.
00:56:03.000Not, of course, helping, creating, solving a lot of the problems that we all face.
00:56:06.000And we have to keep all of the technology secret.
00:56:09.000Everything has to be not open sourced.
00:56:11.000Everything has to be kept for power purposes and ego.
00:56:14.000And, you know, it's when we look at it from the bigger picture, it's absolutely sad and pathetic.
00:56:20.000They've got to be 30 years ahead with what we have publicly.
00:56:23.000You know, they're 30 years advanced in some ways of what's the classified stuff that's out there.
00:56:28.000And they're holding that and withholding it and using it to make weapons.
00:56:33.000The whole goal of this is the Military-Industrial-Banking-Intelligence-Petroleum Complex, is what I call it.
00:56:41.000And it's basically this organization of rich people that want to maintain power and control under any terms possible.
00:56:49.000And that includes keeping these technologies under wraps and only for them and for their purposes.
00:57:25.000They say, when the first V-2 hit London, von Braun remarked to his colleagues, the rocket worked perfectly, except for landing on the wrong planet.
00:58:03.000I don't know, focus the energy into a city?
00:58:05.000So about cold fusion, Peter Hagelstein is a researcher at MIT.
00:58:10.000I went to a cold fusion course that they had an open IAP course where you could just basically anyone from the public can go there and go to MIT and take a course on cold fusion for a week.
00:58:18.000and um... there's all these professors only students there and that just came
00:58:22.000to show up for the course i i of course went cuz i'm eleven you know right i live close enough to boston i drove in
00:58:28.000every day actually state my my brothers lives in boston so i stayed
00:58:32.000what's what explain to us fusion cold fusion basically idea is that
00:58:38.000you know in regular fusion fusion happens in a star We have the biggest fusion reactor in the sky.
00:58:42.000We're trying to, we're wasting tons of money on hot fusion trying to build these tokamak reactors and these fusion reactors here on Earth to mimic what happens in the sun.
00:58:52.000It's literally what's called, you know, breaking the Coulomb barrier.
00:58:56.000It's pushing through gravity and other forces.
00:58:58.000It's pushing these things so close together that they get so close that through quantum like tunneling, they think that they're in the same place and they actually fuse.
00:59:06.000So like a hydrogen would come together and make a helium or something like that?
00:59:20.000So there's a mass difference between the nucleus and there's a mass conversion.
00:59:25.000So some of that mass is down converted and then the leftover mass is actually energy through equals mc squared and that we can extract that extra energy that's left over after the fusion reaction.
00:59:42.000So it will, yeah, it will actually, in S.T.A.R.S., Carl Sagan is a good book on this, The Cosmos, if you ever read Cosmos by Carl Sagan, he talks about this, there's a documentary on it too, where he basically breaks down what stars do.
01:00:56.000It was when it came out with Pons and Fleischmann, these two award-winning electrochemists, discovered this effect at, you know, I think it was Brigham and Young University, where they discovered this, in Utah.
01:01:09.000And they weren't sure what to do with the effect that they discovered.
01:01:11.000They went to people in their department to try and, you know, what do we do?
01:01:14.000Because, like, we have a new breakthrough energy source, potentially.
01:01:17.000We could get shot by the oil companies.
01:01:56.000They wrote an obituary for ColdFusion before they had the data and the results back from their lab.
01:02:00.000But real quick, can you explain what ColdFusion is?
01:02:03.000It's now called lattice-assisted nuclear reaction because what they know is happening is that inside of a lattice of a metal, these atoms are able to behave differently than they behave inside a star or inside the surface of the sun where they're fusing.
01:02:18.000So inside of a metal, you can saturate metal.
01:02:22.000What they do is they saturate palladium with tons of deuterium.
01:02:41.000So what they do is they take deuterium and they pump a ton of it into this palladium lattice until they get a saturation of over 90 percent.
01:02:49.000And then when they hit that that saturation point which they proved the Caltech and MIT
01:02:53.000replication experiments never got up to that level where they would have even seen an effect in their labs.
01:02:58.000But numerous other labs have done this over the past 30 years since this and have shown positive results.
01:03:04.000And there's an international collaboration of scientists still working on cold fusion and still researching this.
01:03:20.000And then you say, because it's heavier, they don't like bounce past each other.
01:03:23.000They have more of a tendency to, to nail each other when they, but what do you do?
01:03:26.000Do you vibrate the palladium to get them to fuse?
01:03:29.000Well, they found that vibrating the palladium, or shooting it with a laser, and something called superwaves, where they have multiple frequencies added on top of the same wave, when they hit them with these sort of superfrequencies called superwaves, or do laser-assisted, lattice-assisted nuclear reaction, that it increases the effect.
01:03:49.000So there is some sort of, what we believe is going on, is that there's some sort of entanglement, some sort of coupling between the atoms inside this lattice when you get a high enough concentration and get enough of them packed in.
01:03:59.000And that allows for fusion to take place.
01:04:02.000Not only does it allow for it to take place, but it also allows for the gammas that should be produced in these reactions.
01:04:09.000That was one of the arguments that these reactions should have produced gamma rays that should have killed these scientists if they were actually producing fusion in the laboratory.
01:04:17.000But they've shown through Mossbauer effects and Bremsstrahlung radiation that they're actually able to divide that energy up and release it as phonons or electronic vibrations to a lattice, to the lattice.
01:04:30.000So that's essentially how they convert it into energy that we can use?
01:04:33.000But we can't use it, because in order to use energy like that, right, in order to build a power plant, I have to make steam.
01:04:44.000We boil water, and then we use that water to push a Tesla turbine.
01:04:48.000The same technology that Tesla invented.
01:04:50.000So we could use the phonons to create piezoelectric, basically vibrate it until it creates an electrical charge.
01:04:58.000It might be a way to do this with cold fusion where we create smaller volts.
01:05:02.000The thing is that there's more research that needs to be done into turning this into usable energy because you can build a cold fusion reactor, but if it's cold and it's not boiling water, then you're not going to be able to produce steam.
01:05:12.000You're not going to be able to build a power plant with it.
01:05:17.000It's just happening—cold is, I think, a relative term.
01:05:21.000I believe they electrolyze this, and they actually try not to make it too hot, because it will actually fissure the metal and have other effects.
01:05:30.000But it takes place cold, yes, at a much colder temperature than— So wait, wait, wait.
01:05:34.000You're saying that they can do it, but they just can't convert the energy in any meaningful way?
01:05:39.000That's one of the biggest problems right now.
01:05:40.000Like, energy's coming out, and they're like, now what?
01:05:42.000Yeah, so now we've measured, you know, the U.S.
01:05:44.000Navy SPAWAR lab actually measured tritium in their cold fusion tests.
01:06:27.000So if we could figure out how to get energy from vibrating palladium, I keep thinking of piezoelectric, which is just energy that you get from movement, then maybe we could have it vibrating.
01:07:38.000No, but I mean like in the modern iterations, he's got palladium in this core.
01:07:42.000Then it like generates electricity of some sort.
01:07:44.000I'm sure when Hollywood was redoing that film, they consult with people like me, because I've been approached by people in Hollywood, like, look, I'm making a film and I want some real science to throw in or something and mix with this that's realistic and stuff.
01:08:23.000You mentioned before that there are people who don't want the system to change, and I hear a lot that's actually a very left-wing talking point.
01:08:29.000The environmentalists, the climate change activists say that it's the big oil companies, their banker buddies, and the politicians who don't want to lose that control over the people.
01:09:04.000And so, men on the left think it's the industrialists doing it on purpose, because so long as we're addicted to this, they can say, oh, but we can't get rid of it, you'll die.
01:09:13.000Do you think that there's, like, I've seen so many videos where they're like, I have invented cold fusion, or I have invented infinite energy, and they show, like, magnets on a wheel spinning, and it's, like, very ridiculous.
01:09:21.000But in a more serious tone, do you think that there may be scientists who have developed some maybe, you know, prominent renewable-type energy or clean energy that's being suppressed?
01:09:31.000I'll mention one, um, you know, you mentioned like perpetual motion machines.
01:09:36.000I've only seen one in the literature, which actually might work.
01:09:39.000And it's based on Einstein's Brownian motion.
01:09:42.000And it's, uh, I, that would mean that more energy is coming out of a system that was put into it that defies the laws of physics, doesn't it?
01:09:50.000It's basically like it's a quantum effect and it basically exploits the Heisenberg uncertainty principle in some ways, which is kind of like what I talked about with these squeeze states.
01:09:59.000You're squeezing one of those parameters in the Heisenberg uncertainty principle to make the other one go astronomical so that you can change its position or its momentum in space by focusing one.
01:10:10.000If you know one You can only know the position or the momentum of an object to within a degree of h-bar over 2pi.
01:10:16.000That's the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.
01:10:17.000So if you know the exact position to within a finer degree of uncertainty than h-bar over 2pi, automatically the momentum will just go astronomical, just because it has to conserve this principle.
01:10:50.000The General Motors streetcar conspiracy was a legit conspiracy.
01:10:53.000There used to be trolley systems connecting the entire United States and the East Coast.
01:10:56.000I could take a trolley from here to New York and I could pay like a dollar for it.
01:11:00.000But then they took all the trolleys, they bought out all the trolley systems, and pulled all the cars off the rails, disassembled all the rails, all the train tracks, and then no one had any way to get around, so they had to buy cars.
01:11:10.000So I can't even get into the details, but I could vaguely say that I met individuals that created You know, innovations, and they were bought out by big companies, and they were told to shut up, and they did, and they gave them a big fat paycheck, and a lot of these companies that these new advancements would contradict with their market, they just got rid of.
01:11:30.000Yeah, and especially when you look at something like, you know, the petrodollar and its effects on the world stage involving Saudi Arabia.
01:11:38.000I mean, Saudi Arabia is an empire in decline already, But if you look at the world going off oil, they're a country that again has a very hard time getting fresh water, has a very hard time creating any kind of vegetation, any kind of farmland.
01:11:53.000Saudi Arabia, some people speculate, might even have a nuclear weapon already.
01:11:57.000So when we're seeing empires in decline, there's a lot of ramifications for that and that's why there's been larger theories out there that there is some kind of bigger conspiracy to make sure that we stay on gas, that we stay on oil, rather than of course advance towards free energy or free technology or even innovations that are less, you know, cost-inducive and don't prop up the Saudi empire.
01:12:19.000The Saudis actually have been publishing a lot of interesting papers at their university on squeezed states and metamaterials and all this kind of stuff.
01:12:27.000I looked up the streetcar conspiracy and it's not as crazy as people think.
01:12:32.000It's semi-debunked, it seems, based on one source I'm reading.
01:12:35.000The general idea was there was a very aggressive campaign to buy up streetcars and then sell automobiles, but it was because the streetcar system was already struggling and potentially on the verge of collapse.
01:13:15.000Doing this involved buying up electric trolley operators like the Los Angeles Railway.
01:13:20.000They say it was only feasible because the streetcar companies National Line purchased weren't on.
01:13:26.000Bianco points out that this plan wouldn't have been feasible if the streetcar companies National City Lines purchased weren't already struggling.
01:13:33.000So I guess the general idea is the streetcars were in a state of, you know, insolvency.
01:13:37.000That's allowed auto manufacturers to come in and displace them.
01:13:41.000I mean, look at the MTA, right, in New York City.
01:13:44.000You've got an electric, essentially, Public transportation system, it's failing.
01:13:54.000And there was some hope that Amazon coming with this new headquarters would pump in enough revenue that they could shift over to fixing the subway system.
01:14:03.000And then, you know, there was this big protest by people like Ocasio-Cortez in the financial district which
01:14:42.000So I think this more says to something that happens when you have centralization, when you have big government.
01:14:50.000More than when you would have a free market.
01:14:53.000But there's also elements of the free market that we were just talking about, like the electric car, that get bought up and get shut down, which sucks because they buy all the copyrights.
01:15:03.000I gotta tell you, as an owner of an electric car, there are pros and cons.
01:15:07.000I mean, when we're looking at local grocery store shopping, it's wonderful.
01:15:24.000Are they like suppressing solar technology?
01:15:26.000Could you have like really, really good solar panels if they were allowed?
01:15:30.000You mentioned solar earlier as being suppressed.
01:15:32.000Um, well, yeah, the going back to the 70s is was a technology like, you know, even when solar panels came out, they were people they're paying people off to lie about the efficiency of them, like, you know, not to so that other people wouldn't go off the grid, because the electric companies would go out of business.
01:16:51.000I mean, I've seen videos, and I think, from a layman's point of view, I just read something on it seems to make sense, but I don't know anything about it.
01:16:58.000Not as far as we haven't built one that works.
01:17:01.000We haven't, you know, gotten a group out there that works.
01:17:03.000And obviously if it was such a great idea back in the 70s with these, you know, ultra efficient carburetors and all this, this, this stuff you hear about, it's like, why isn't it, why isn't it being done more today?
01:17:12.000You know, didn't they buy, someone bought his patent and then he died shortly thereafter.
01:17:45.000I believe in intellectual property, like you have your own ideas and your own thoughts, but there should be a different system of how we make money off that and how we control over that, because it's really not beneficial to the species, the way things are set up like that.
01:18:01.000You know, I want to mention something about the streetcar conspiracy stuff.
01:18:11.000Or, or, not, not GM, I'm probably, I'm probably confusing things, but when you have, I'll put it very simply, regardless of who owns what, When you have a car company that has to sell advertisements to a media company, and then the boss of the media company says, look, we run this story, we lose a major advertiser.
01:18:30.000So I'm not saying I know exactly what for, but if you come to me and say that automobile companies, you know, work together to corrupt and destroy streetcars and systems like that, I, I want to believe it.
01:18:42.000Cause I, cause I think it, it's, it's, it's completely feasible.
01:18:46.000And when I hear stories where they're like, well, you know, the streetcars were already doing bad.
01:18:51.000Like, yeah, like we believe the media.
01:18:53.000Oh, you know, Oh, these big industrialists are all benefiting from the dissolution of public interest interests and publicly available transport.
01:19:01.000Let's just believe the mainstream media on this one.
01:19:03.000No, but I will point out at the same time.
01:19:05.000For me, it is kind of a coin toss because the MTA is collapsing.
01:19:08.000Government can't really run this properly.
01:19:10.000Well, there are some good points that you did bring up, though, with that, because, you know, you have to look at the time period that those rail systems were built and the metallurgy that existed at the time.
01:19:17.000And it's not, you know, to think that it's not hard to believe that those things were a rust bucket by the time this this actually happened, because we didn't have the metallurgy to really, you know, prevent against that all the steel things that we could make was very, you know, limited.
01:19:30.000So like, it probably rusted really quickly.
01:19:32.000You know, one of the issues is for Chicago, for places like New York, I know this in Chicago, people complain that the fare is too high.
01:19:41.000But clearly it's not high enough to actually sustain the system itself.
01:19:46.000So it's heavily subsidized by the taxpayer, and that's still not enough.
01:19:50.000They were talking about shutting down the... what was it, Luke?
01:20:23.000There's already major problems with it.
01:20:25.000I mean, a lot of the systems are dilapidated and there's entire industries and entire real estate markets connected to it that almost went out of business.
01:20:33.000But I think they announced that they're not going to be taking it out, that they're going to be keeping it in, and they stopped the construction efforts.
01:20:41.000When they announced that they were going to suspend for like a couple years the L train to fix it because it's in disrepair, the people who own the real estate start freaking out because who wants to live in Williamsburg If you can't get to Manhattan, you have to take the G train down south, or like the A-C train, then go to the Financial District.
01:20:59.000For those who aren't familiar with New York, it is not fun to have one train that takes five minutes to jump from Brooklyn straight to Manhattan.
01:21:07.000You have to take one train way far south for like 30 minutes, then hop on a different train to take you to the Financial District, then hop on the Q, enter the R, up to 14th Street.
01:21:15.000Transportation is a huge, huge problem.
01:21:40.000I remember to mention Greta Thunberg again.
01:21:43.000She said it's it's insane to think there's infinite economic growth.
01:21:47.000And what she doesn't understand is digital spaces.
01:21:50.000Because I remember the time when she was saying this, like I remember what the first time I heard her talking about it, infinite economic growth.
01:21:56.000I was playing some golf game on my phone where you like, you know, pull your finger back and then he hits a little golf ball and falls in the hole.
01:22:02.000And there were power ups you could buy.
01:22:04.000And I was like, when I buy that power up, Literally nothing is produced.
01:22:07.000It's just a code changes from yes to no.
01:22:16.000And then he can spend that dollar on whatever.
01:22:18.000So yes, if we start moving into virtual environments, second life type things, there can be theoretically infinite economic growth because you buy digital things.
01:22:29.000That's why, like, makeup companies are taking a huge hit, because nobody's going out anymore.
01:22:33.000I think they're one of the big, big... So they're, like, trying to merge into digital makeup and digital, you know, like, that kind of stuff.
01:22:52.000I think the filet mignon steaks are only going to be for the super uber billionaire elites and we're going to be very comfy in our little Matrix battery compartments.
01:23:01.000You're going to live in the pod and you're going to eat bugs, but you're going to be in the Matrix, flying around on a dragon, throwing fireballs.
01:23:06.000You're going to be neural linked to the back of your head.
01:23:13.000Assuming that we have infinite power, if we can tap fusion, how would we build a warp drive?
01:23:19.000Well, you just need the right type of non-linear optical materials on the surface of your craft.
01:23:23.000I'd say some waveguides, maybe some monatomic elements.
01:23:26.000The idea is to create a meta-surface or a meta-atom.
01:23:29.000We're called meta-atoms or meta-surfaces.
01:23:31.000It's basically like you have a surface of all these atoms and then you get them condensed to the same wavelength through what's called light-matter coupling.
01:23:39.000And when you couple light with itself, you create these condensed matter states, and then you can get the entire craft to act like a single atom.
01:23:48.000And if it acts like a single atom, then you can influence it with quantum mechanical behaviors and quantum mechanical properties.
01:24:47.000Even in Star Trek, where they have warp 9, and they can travel much faster than the speed of light, they can barely get anywhere within our own galaxy.
01:24:59.000So people, like, I don't think people realize the vast space between galaxies, and even between quadrants of our own galaxy, traveling at the speed of light.
01:25:13.000This is the series where they get transported to, like, a different quadrant, and it would take them 70 years traveling at their fastest speed to make it back to Earth, and they're traveling substantially faster than light.
01:25:26.000That's how big the galaxy is, let alone going to a different galaxy, you know?
01:25:30.000Warp drive's like just a stepping stone towards a greater field warp drive or something?
01:25:36.000One of the weirdest things, right, is there's something called quantum non-locality in physics, and this sort of reinterpretation of quantum mechanics that was done by John Archibald Wheeler, who worked with Einstein, and he also was employed by one of these big companies that I want to mention and talk about, because we talk about scientific conspiracies and ways that they suppress scientific information.
01:25:58.000Did you know that there's a company that runs and manages all of our science national labs?
01:26:02.000They run Lawrence Livermore Labs, Oak Ridge, they run Los Alamos.
01:26:40.000So basically all the research that goes on in our labs, they can decide what gets canned and what gets funded.
01:26:46.000And if anything gets discovered in our lab, it goes up to their management chain.
01:26:49.000And of course, they're right there to scoop it all up.
01:26:52.000Do you think that if someone did discover a rapidly renewable, let's not even say like perpetual motion, right?
01:27:00.000This idea that you can get energy, more energy out than you could put in.
01:27:03.000Let's say they actually discover something that just uses, say, ambient energy in a very simple way that produces like a massive amount of clean energy.
01:27:11.000Do you think that they would suppress it out of fear it could destabilize the economy?
01:27:20.000Historically, they've done that with every single technology and new breakthrough.
01:27:23.000Even when the Russians discovered that, you know, the guy who flung the wing nut off of a thing and noticed that it was spinning in air and would change directions.
01:27:42.000They wrote a paper on it, the Russians wrote a paper on it a couple years later, they called it the Tennis Racket Effect, and they never talked about this incident on the space station.
01:27:51.000You know what one of my favorite stories is?
01:28:07.000Now there's another meme that goes around where someone responded saying, using a pencil is extremely dangerous because it creates particulate matter that can get into the instruments and into the air and it floats around aimlessly, so using a pencil is actually a bad idea.
01:28:18.000Getting an ink pen that can work and is self-pressurized is actually much smarter.
01:28:23.000And then it's like, it's one of those things where you think, haha, it is so dumb.
01:28:29.000But it's only because you don't understand anything about space or technology or the physics that you assume.
01:28:35.000And that's a really good way to understand everything in our society, from politics to science, in that so many people who have no idea what they're talking about will push things that will make everything worse and then mock those who are actually trying to solve the problem.
01:28:51.000And there's also what we find is like there's a ton of people just filling the thing with mud.
01:28:56.000They're filling the thing with those perpetual motion machines and those magnetic motors and all these other things.
01:29:02.000And it's just basically a perpetual time-wasting machine is what I call it.
01:29:07.000I love watching these perpetual motion machines because most the time you can tell, you can see where they hit the battery, you know what I mean, to make it spin.
01:29:15.000And then other times it's like, even if that really was, you'll see like really clever ones.
01:29:19.000I'm like, how do you get energy out of that?
01:29:39.000You know what I love, though, is when people talk about magnets, and they're like, why don't you just have a wheel with a bunch of magnets on it, so that when the wheel comes around, the magnet pushes it, and it just keeps getting pushed forever, and I'm like, because the magnets are pushing and pulling.
01:29:55.000So you asked me before about who I thought was like the weirdest guy that we've ever had come on and present, or like most interesting, so I thought of like two probably examples.
01:30:05.000You know, you mentioned high-frequency gravitational waves that was mentioned in that thing.
01:30:09.000We actually had a guy named Gary Stevenson from DARPA who came on and presented on high-frequency gravitational waves and their generation.
01:30:18.000And he talked about this, we talked a bit about that Nazi bell, the rotating mercury plasma and these Taurus drives.
01:30:24.000So like, we found out that General Electric actually did some experiments on a patent that was patented by an engineer in Valley Forge PA named Henry William Wallace, and it was on this gravitomagnetic effect, or kinemasic field.
01:30:39.000And they literally... GE was taking, like, tokamak reactors and rotating mercury mixed with, like, cesium, barium, and these other elements to try and test these torsion field theories of, like, of this physics and stuff.
01:30:53.000And we have papers on it from, like, these guys going back to, you know, talking about rotating superconductors in these magnetic fields.
01:31:01.000One of the other guys that presented was a guy named Alzafan who did some of these research experiments for Boeing back in the 80s and 1981 it was a paper that was written and we're trying to replicate that experiment in our lab right now that's kind of where we're at and I think that was like the turning point where our scientists in you know 1981 when they did this Boeing experiment with Alzafan on nuclear magnetic resonance I think that was the turning point when they realized that this, that the spins of these atomic molecules and the elements that are in the atoms is really like key to how this effect works.
01:31:36.000Because that was where they first came up with a realistic theory for it.
01:31:39.000This guy, Al Zifan, and then he got funding actually from Boeing to do this research and it was classified for years.
01:31:46.000Until, like, we found it through, you know, a couple years back through our research.
01:31:50.000And now we're actually putting this together in a tabletop lab experiment to run it ourselves.
01:32:11.000The atoms are spinning, they come together, and because of this Coulomb effect, they spin into each other basically, and they start to spin as one, and that's what fusion is.
01:32:23.000Fusion is breaking the Coulomb barrier.
01:32:25.000And Coulomb was a French scientist, the father of electromagnetism and charge.
01:32:30.000He's the first person to isolate and identify electric charge, and did a lot of the experiments to set the foundations for electromagnetism, which of course was picked up by Heaviside, Gibbs, Maxwell, and those guys who formalized it into a field theory, into a mathematical field theory.
01:32:50.000Which is really some of the foundational points of where all this stuff comes from.
01:32:56.000That's where this comes from because he's like the father of electric charge.
01:32:59.000He proposed like a barrier, an electromagnetic barrier that atoms couldn't pass through because the electrons are pushing themselves away or something.
01:33:07.000It's because their neutrons make the atoms heavier that they're able to There's a strong nuclear force which holds these subatomic elements together.
01:33:39.000It's just, you know, when you create one proton, but when you start weaving these things together, they have to have these other elements in there to hold the knots together.
01:33:46.000And those elements are actually neutrons.
01:33:49.000And, um, it's, so it's, it's, there's a mathematical core theory behind, you know, this, this image that you get of just these balls, these colored balls, like neutrons are protons are red and neutrons are green and they stick together.
01:34:17.000If you haven't already, smash the like button, like, subscribe, share, all that good stuff, notification bell, and become a member at TimCast.com because we will have a bonus segment up, a members-only piece of content after the show just for those who are members to help make sure that we don't get Completely annihilated if we ever do get banned.
01:34:33.000But let's read some of these superchats.
01:34:34.000And again, make sure you smash that like button.
01:34:36.000Can I plug alienscientist.com and also my YouTube channel is alienscientist on YouTube.
01:34:42.000We're trying to break 100,000 subscribers and if you guys can help that happen, that would be awesome.
01:35:52.000I want to know why it doesn't have 10 million views.
01:35:56.000Well, I think Will of the People, to be completely honest, is just not the kind of pop music that typically would get a million views.
01:36:05.000You know, there are some songs that are very serious and don't do that well, and there are some songs that are very, like, You know, orchestrated very well.
01:36:13.000To put it simply, depends on what you define as a good song.
01:36:16.000Is a good song a song that people will want to share and listen to over and over again?
01:36:19.000Because if that's your definition, Will of the People probably ain't it.
01:36:23.000If your definition of a good song is something that has meaning and is, you know, just makes you feel good and makes you want to listen and makes you want to play it, then it probably is.
01:36:31.000But certainly it's not in, uh, not for most people.
01:37:12.000It still was clever marketing, but once people saw it, everybody kept sharing it because the song was fun and funny and people liked doing the horse-riding dance and stuff.
01:38:44.000I invite Stephen Greer to come on our show and talk to our team of physicists about that and see what they have to say, because I think we have the subject matter experts beyond what Stephen Greer has, because I know who's on his team, and I know who's on my team.
01:38:56.000Justin Jarchow asks, for the alien scientist, do you believe Bob Lazar's story, and do you believe Dr. Stephen Greer?
01:39:25.000The thing with Bob Lazar is that we invite him to come on and present, and we have so many other physicists with so much real actionable intelligence that we can actually build and test in our laboratory, unlike the Element 115 stuff.
01:40:16.000They did this Ramey memo that they posed in a press conference room with a weather balloon.
01:40:21.000And then apparently the real material went to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and was studied in an underground facility at Wright-Patterson.
01:40:28.000Apparently they had like a whole underground lab that was an underground city essentially built at Wright-Patterson in the 40s when they first built Wright-Patterson Airfield.
01:40:36.000and that they were doing research on this and that's what led me to Battelle
01:40:39.000because Battelle is literally 65 miles away from Dayton, Ohio
01:40:43.000in Columbus, Ohio. They were the top metallurgists and one of the top military and industrial contractors at
01:40:52.000They would have been the perfect place.
01:40:53.000They would have been the only place that I would have sent metals for analysis if I was, you know, the military back then.
01:40:58.000And if I was the Air Force, that's the first place I would have sent.
01:41:00.000But what's interesting about Battelle is that we've shown that they run all our national labs.
01:41:05.000They're also a private corporation, which makes them inaccessible by FOIA.
01:41:09.000So all this research that they've done, going back to 38, you won't be able to find, you won't be able to get with FOIAs.
01:41:14.000And that's been one of the biggest problems in ufology is saying, well, if this material is real and Roswell is real, where's the material going?
01:41:42.000Liquid Logic says, Tim, can you raise awareness that currently Nobel Prize nominee Julian Assange is being deprived of his winter clothing since October?
01:41:50.000People should contact Governor of HMP Belmarsh Prison, Rob Davis.
01:41:57.000DeltaSly says, we need to re-pursue the research of lab-grown brain organoids and understanding the conscious without moral and ethical restrictions.
01:42:09.000One thing that Bob Lazar didn't talk about at Area 51 was these things called foggles.
01:42:13.000Apparently, this is a real thing that when you're outside on a base at these CBER facilities, you have to wear these goggles on your head, which limit your vision.
01:42:22.000So you can't even see 20 feet in front of you.
01:42:25.000Apparently they use these on like pilots and stuff.
01:42:28.000One of the guys who first guy who talked about that was actually a friend of mine.
01:42:31.000When I started getting into this, back in like 2004, I watched this documentary by this guy named Edgar Foucher talking about, you know, he worked at Area 51.
01:42:40.000And I made a bunch of videos on this and I started talking about it and a guy who knew him actually put me in touch with this guy who was a former Area 51 employee out at the base and I became friends with him and worked like kind of I talked to him like every day for like a period of like five six years with this guy Ed Foucher but he was the first person to talk about metamaterials and quasicrystals being part of this research and that was back in 1998 before like anyone was talking about these materials which is super fascinating.
01:43:07.000So I started researching metamaterials, and of course you find out that they're used for invisibility, stealth, and cloaking technology, which why wouldn't they be interested in that?
01:43:16.000But then the other thing with these quasicrystals, these aperiodic crystals, and Veritasium channel did a thing on those aperiodic tylenes and showed how these symmetries, they're like things that you look at them up close and they don't have any symmetry, but you zoom way out and they suddenly have these symmetries.
01:44:09.000Asteroid mining is going to become the world's first trillionaire, and that's what we need to move towards, because that's what's going to launch us to this post-scarcity society that we're trying to get to, where we don't have money anymore.
01:44:20.000There's no concept of that in the future, in the Star Trek society anyways.
01:44:25.000There's no need for politicians either.
01:44:26.000We need to get rid of politicians altogether.
01:45:01.000Matt Hatter says, I looked up the patent for the inertial mass reduction device, and its design is almost identical in form and use to the EM drive, a sealed conical resonant cavity with microwave emitters pointed into it.
01:45:35.000He's got a quantizedinertia.com, and he's got a whole bunch of papers on there that he's written, and he's kind of going after that MDrive thing.
01:45:43.000And there's a ton of DARPA funding for MDRIVE, like we said.
01:45:46.000Like I said, that $500,000 on pays isn't the only thing going on.
01:45:57.000It's a conical cavity, and apparently it's an asymmetric field that's produced on one side through these forces, and it creates a push, and it gets rid of...
01:46:10.000His theories get rid of the need for dark matter.
01:46:12.000It gets rid of, you know, dark matter.
01:46:17.000Dark matter is kind of a very big controversy in physics right now.
01:46:20.000There's billions of dollars being put into the hunt for dark matter to try and, you know, discover Where, you know, prove dark matter is real.
01:46:28.000The only thing we've gotten close was, you know, the Nobel Prize was given out for this gravitational lensing apparently from dark matter and stuff.
01:46:35.000But I still haven't, I still don't know that there is a hardcore proof of dark matter and we've wasted so much money looking for dark matter instead of pursuing other theories like this M-Drive which could lead to new propulsion technologies.
01:47:00.000There's this missing matter from the puzzle.
01:47:04.000Is that what they mean by dark matter with antimatter?
01:47:06.000Antimatter and dark matter are different.
01:47:08.000This goes back to what Dirac called Dirac holes.
01:47:13.000It's basically a missing point in the physics and in the equations.
01:47:17.000He was the first person to actually predict antimatter before it was discovered.
01:47:22.000But we have discovered antimatter and it's sort of like a fact of nature that we have all these particles and each particle has its own antiparticle as well.
01:47:29.000There's been a lot of experiments with antimatter.
01:47:33.000There's a guy named Daniel Kaplan who's doing some research into muonium, which is anti-muons.
01:47:40.000An exotic atom that forms with an anti-muon and an electron, it creates what's almost like an atom.
01:47:47.000It's like a proton, but instead of the nucleus being a proton, it's actually an anti-muon.
01:47:52.000And it kind of has its own weird properties, but they're trying to produce these and see if they actually fall up in a vacuum, because they still don't know whether antimatter falls up or down, but they predict that it will fall down.
01:49:42.000So Wright State is a university that was built right next to the original Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, before the new Wright-Patterson Air Force Base was built up north.
01:49:50.000But apparently there's a whole tunnel system that connects all the buildings.
01:49:53.000There's 1.8 miles of tunnels that connect all the buildings under Wright State University.
01:49:58.000And there's conspiracy theories that go around with all the students there that say that there's aliens down there, that these tunnels were used for government research into aliens and stuff.
01:50:09.000Which is kind of interesting, because the first building that was built, according to Wright State University's official website, is actually called Alien Hall.
01:50:39.000And there's a lot of theories that this was part of an old facility and that, you know, that there's a wall behind the wall.
01:50:45.000So we're kind of want to do an investigation like one of those UFO hunters shows where we go to Wright State and see if there's indeed, you know, there's something hidden in those tunnels under there.
01:50:53.000There's a crap ton of tunnels that the United States government was building because of the Cold War, so they exist.
01:50:58.000And I'd imagine I'd imagine, you know, the reality is they're doing research, top secret research.
01:51:04.000We know the Manhattan Project was real and they're researching weapons.
01:51:16.000They said a lot of the UFOs stories were spread.
01:51:18.000There's a movie called Mirage Men, which actually takes the position that most of the UFOs and alien stories were actually spread by the CIA to cover up the technologies that they were working on.
01:52:13.000Yeah, that's... Listen, I'm not trying to be mean or anything, but there's some civil rights issues that make me not want to go to that country.
01:52:19.000It's not LGBTQ-friendly, to say the least.
01:52:22.000So, very interestingly, as Luke brings this up, we have a superchat from Robert Miller who said, Saudi Arabia is massively investing in green technology.
01:52:28.000So that's actually a bad example, since they clearly see the handwriting on the wall and are making massive investments in green.
01:52:34.000Like I said, Saudi Arabia's university over there has some really interesting papers and a whole team that's working on these nanotechnologies and this kind of stuff, these photonic materials.
01:52:45.000Where they are in the world, they're screwed.
01:52:48.000As soon as people stop buying their oil, they're screwed.
01:53:22.000I think the silence daily article you're talking about is either magic angle graphing and there's a couple other applications of graphing where they create graphing sandwiches where they put like a layer of superconductor between two layers of graphing or they put a layer of a different type of material between two layers of graphing and there's a lot of perovskites.
01:53:39.000That's the other one that they've done.
01:53:45.000A perovskite is, well, it's a German, I mean Russian term for a, it's a type of, it's a type of material that conducts protons and produces, it has a strange quantum behaviors and quantum effects.
01:54:00.000Alright, we got this from the Scott16, it says, the highest level conspiracy theory.
01:54:06.000Every single conspiracy theory that we know or will know are false because we are allowed to know them.
01:54:50.000And then you start talking about Battelle.
01:54:53.000Did they suppress his warp drive technology in the 50s?
01:54:57.000So this was in the 1970s because it was after Star Trek was 19 like 60 you know I think 68 or 69 or whatever I don't remember the when Star Trek started so this was this was 1970s that Alcubierre published that paper it was not suppressed in fact NASA Sonny White of NASA's Advanced Concepts Research Office like he's been writing papers on this and he's actually been presenting it at like Estes Park and a lot of these other conferences and has a lot of work that NASA is doing on this with the I think it's the Starship program.
01:55:27.000There's a program that they're working on with NASA right now with Sonny White is the guy's name, Harold White.
01:56:02.000He actually left a whole notebook full of all of our H-bomb secrets on a train one time.
01:56:13.000But yeah, he was involved in squeeze light research.
01:56:15.000We just found out recently, back in 1985, the stuff that University of Rochester is doing with what's called polariton condensates or surface plasmon polaritons.
01:56:57.000Sorry if I'm interrupting, but Jonathan Muntz says, my grandfather was a top judge for the Air Force at Wright-Patterson in charge of contract negotiations.
01:58:41.000I'm probably going to stop in New Jersey on the way back to our Falcon Labs with my friend Mark and do some more research on this alzaphone experiment we're building at that lab currently.
01:58:53.000But we're definitely trying to get hooked up with more researchers, more labs, more scientists who are passionate about this and interested in pursuing this type of technology.
01:59:01.000And that's definitely something we should talk about.
01:59:05.000Charlie in Charge says, the Akashic Records is the name of the theorized force that people like Tesla tap into for their huge leaps in knowledge.
01:59:13.000I highly recommend learning about it as it's a really interesting topic.
01:59:26.000It's like when we talk about this the other night on the bonus segment, how like God or whatever that light energy is, we're transmitting energy to it and that it's trying to transmit energy to us, but we're like having a hard time receiving it.
01:59:47.000That kind of reminds me of this idea of, you know, that's kind of what I do with alien scientists.
01:59:51.000The idea behind an alien scientist is that I created this idea of something.
01:59:56.000It's kind of like what I call channeling, you know, where we say, like, we're going to envision, I'm going to channel this God and I'm going to vicariously live through this God through myself.
02:00:04.000And that gives you God-like powers because you're able to start putting your mind in a different sort of A way of thinking about things.
02:00:12.000So this is like a practice that I do a lot with trying to envision what aliens are thinking, how their physics works.
02:00:20.000And I've definitely gotten some downloads in my dreams.
02:01:04.000It's like a liquid polymer that actually hardens of some kind.
02:01:11.000It's like the diamonds dissolved in this other carrying agent and then that evaporates and it leaves behind this crystal structure that forms in a diamond somehow.
02:01:45.000And that turns out that it has really interesting properties for these materials.
02:01:48.000So these metallic glasses, there's a whole video on metallic glass.
02:01:53.000They're doing laser etching and polishing of it to create these surfaces which are amiable to the environments.
02:01:59.000So they can actually make this stuff hydrophobic and hydrophilic by etching it with lasers.
02:02:05.000Just by changing the nanosurface structure of these materials, it actually changes the physical properties and gives them completely different properties.
02:02:12.000What happens if it's hydrophobic and hydrophilic?
02:02:53.000Can you alloy metallic glass with graphene?
02:02:56.000One of the interesting things, Major Marcel, the main guy from Roswell, on his deathbed in a 1985 interview, he said that It wasn't a weather balloon, it was a material that he couldn't bend or break, that he could fold it up into a ball and then let it go on the table and would uncrinkle itself and fold itself out mirror smooth again.
02:03:16.000Now we have no of no such material like that, but the closest thing that we have currently is metallic glass because it has this ability like it's like... He was saying it would fold and hold?
02:03:29.000There's a bunch of people who describe this metal, and a bunch of people, even material scientists from Wright-Patterson, who said that they worked on this type of material.
02:03:53.000And the way that we build those is to actually heat up the blade and destroy the blade before it destroys the material.
02:03:58.000It does an action where it will heat up so hot that it will destroy the blade so that you won't be able to cut it because it destroys your blade.
02:04:07.000Interesting stuff, but that's the closest thing we have right now.
02:04:09.000So it's not just graphene, there's a lot of materials out there.
02:05:16.000Yeah, like Microsoft and a lot of these companies, they say like, Apple was one of them, they said like, you know, whatever you invent, while you're an employee of us, is a result of the, you know, intellectual experiences that you gain through being access to our great company.
02:05:31.000And so we own anything that you invent.
02:05:32.000And that's like, even if you go home at the end of the day and write something in your basement, they still want that if you're employed.
02:06:15.000If they got one that's real... There was one interesting video I watched a long time ago, where it was actually, I think, from an honest person, where they were explaining how to create a perpetual motion, but what they said was it simply worked by absorbing sunlight, and then, you know, heating and cooling metal, so one side would You know, become lighter or hotter because of the sunlight.
02:06:36.000The other side would go into a shaded area based on the way that they built it.
02:06:39.000And that could actually make movement.
02:06:41.000But they were like basically just made a really crappy solar wheel.
02:06:44.000When you talk about light matter coupling, what do you think photosynthesis is?
02:07:03.000You talked about using magnesium as the body of a craft, potentially, and that's the atom that's at the center of every chlorophyll molecule.
02:07:19.000It's like the highest spin of any element.
02:07:23.000And so we're kind of like, you kind of think of it as like a pendulum or a flywheel in this material.
02:07:29.000And if we get a sheet of this bismuth, because it has this highest diamagnetism, it's really great to build wave guides out of this material because it's It reacts so quickly and so readily to spin more quickly than any other element on the periodic table.
02:08:03.000If anybody has pieces of Roswell debris that they can legally send me, P.O.
02:08:07.000on the website? I think. We'll figure it out.
02:08:12.000So apparently Jack Vallee has some pieces of this stuff and that's what he brought to Gary Nolan's lab and is doing tests on and stuff and apparently they had some of this material and the destructive analysis doesn't work if you were talking about an atomically structured material that's made on the atomic level.
02:08:29.000We're talking about photonic crystals and photonic circuits.
02:08:33.000This is where we're going technologically with our electronics currently.
02:08:38.000Bridging what's called the terahertz gap.
02:08:40.000So there's actually a gap in the electromagnetic spectrum that we can't really interact with, and it's called the terahertz gap.
02:08:46.000And it's on the level of wavelengths that are where matter is.
02:08:50.000The wavelengths that correspond to the sizes of material objects, of all the elements on this table.
02:08:58.000Once we do that, it's going to be like a merger of electronics with photonics, and there's going to be a replacement of all our technology.
02:09:06.000We're not going to be using electronic devices.
02:09:08.000We're going to be using more quantum-based devices that rely on photonic effects.
02:09:13.000In fact, there's already Electret microphones in your cell phone.
02:09:18.000The microphone in your cell phone works on this more solid-state physics technology, as opposed to the old-school condenser microphones that we're We're working through here, which are older technology.
02:09:31.000Just to wrap it around, you had a bismuth layer, but a magnesium layer underneath the bismuth?
02:09:35.000Yeah, so that material, back to that material from the Art Bell stuff.
02:09:39.000So they sent this material apparently to the U.S.
02:09:41.000Army and got this CRADA agreement with the U.S.
02:09:45.000Army where they sent this material off for analysis and supposedly the U.S.
02:09:48.000Army is going to tell us stuff about it.
02:09:50.000But they have pictures of this material and they show us the micron layer of this.
02:09:55.000And it's magnesium layers and bismuth layers in this material with monatomic iridium, I guess, on the very surface.
02:10:03.000And that's sort of a material we're interested in trying to attempt to create, looking at different manufacturers that can create this material so that we could test in our lab.
02:10:11.000But, again, I don't know, you know, if that is really alien technology or an alien metal, that would be super interesting, and I'm definitely interested in studying that kind of stuff and looking into it, you know?
02:10:22.000This is, uh, a lot of people in the chat are like, Tim's trying so hard to end the podcast.
02:11:31.000You know even though I didn't understand the majority of what you said it's very refreshing to have this conversation and I'm happy we're talking about this and not CNN again ragging on the QAnon shaman and his organic food which they just wrote a piece about right now and it's frustrating and it was really interesting and thought-provoking it was great to see Ian having his moments and of course thank you guys for joining us if you want to support me and what I do you can by purchasing the shirt that I'm wearing right now that says FYI the government is way deadlier than any virus and you could get that shirt On TheBestPoliticalShirts.com.