American Alchemy with Jesse Michels - I Spent 48 Hours with Bob Lazar (The Truth Is Stranger Than You Think)

Episode Date: April 13, 2026

Today’s episode is brought to you by Kraken. Go to https://kraken.com/AA to learn more, and get $25 in bitcoin. Watch Bob’s new movie "S4: The Bob Lazar Story" here: https://www.wearenotalone.com/... Today’s episode is also sponsored by KetoneIQ: Visit https://ketone.com/ALCHEMY for 30% OFF your subscription order PLUS receive a free gift with your second shipment—or find Ketone-IQ at Target stores nationwide and get your first shot free! Pre-order the NEW Believe merch drop at https://www.americanalchemymerch.com/ and check out some of our other items like the Cowboy UFO t-shirt and Atomic Age t-shirt while you're there. The Believe drop is a limited run so grab yours today. Our American Alchemist this week is Bob Lazar. Bob Lazar sat down for the longest and most scientifically rigorous interview he’s done since blowing the whistle on covert Navy UFO reverse engineering programs at Nevada Test Site’s S4 in 1989. He goes deep on UFO science, how the crafts actually fly, talks gravity-altering propulsion with NASA lead electrostatics scientist Charles Buhler, analyzes newly-leaked footage of a UFO flying at Area51 and unpacks his full experience working on the Sports Model UFO: its test flight, how it was found during an archeological dig on the ocean floor, its Element 115-fueled reactor and gravity-altering emitters. He also describes seeing 9 other UFOs in the Hangars at S4, the directed energy and time-manipulation programs he was briefed on and being recruited to the program by Manhattan Project pioneer, Edward Teller. Finally, Lazar says that he now knows how to recreate the exotic, gravity-altering force employed by the UFO he worked in the 80’s but this time in his own personal lab with his own equipment ----------------------- Support Our Other Projects Below! Grab Your American Alchemy Merch Here ➤ https://www.americanalchemymerch.com/ Join The American Alchemy Magazine Here ➤ https://americanalchemymagazine.substack.com/ Subscribe To Our Clips Channel (10 Minute Highlights!) ➤ https://www.youtube.com/@UC8ZKTXN9trt5dhixz6b6l6w ----------------------- JOIN OUR WHOP (Early/Ad Free Episodes) ➤ https://whop.com/jessemichels Instagram ➤ https://www.instagram.com/jessemichelsofficial TikTok ➤ https://www.tiktok.com/@itsjessemichels X ➤ https://twitter.com/AlchemyAmerican Spotify ➤ https://tinyurl.com/jessemichelsspotify Clips Channel ➤ https://www.youtube.com/@jessemichelsclips Apply For Jobs ➤ apply@jessemichelsmedia.com Sponsor Inquiries ➤ sponsor@jessemichelsmedia.com Media Inquiries ➤ media@jessemichelsmedia.com Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction 05:08 Sponsors (Kraken/KetoneIQ) 10:13 Bob's Childhood and Science Obsession 17:53 The Jet Car and Getting Hired at Los Alamos 19:42 Meeting Edward Teller at Los Alamos 24:20 Working on the Particle Accelerator 27:27 The MIT and Caltech Credentials Question 30:15 George Knapp's Visit to Los Alamos 32:39 Teller's Referral and the Path to S4 36:17 The EG&G Interview and Redirect to S4 40:26 Arriving at Area 51 and the Bus Ride 43:15 The Briefings: Galileo, Looking Glass, Sidekick 48:04 Medical Screening and Meeting Barry 50:13 First Impressions of the Craft 54:47 The Blacker-Than-Black Portholes 57:01 Crawling Inside the Craft's Cockpit 1:00:05 Witnessing the Craft's Test Flight 1:07:41 Nine Different Craft in the Hangars 1:11:37 Navy Retrieval and the Ocean Theory 1:15:39 Luigi on Bob's Legacy and the Navy 1:19:07 Top Speed, Delta vs. Omicron Modes 1:22:21 Logan Paul's Area 51 UFO Footage 1:28:59 Satellite Evidence and the Map Change 1:35:01 The Reactor Explosion That Killed Three 1:39:29 The Golf Ball and the Reactor Force Field 1:43:54 It's Not Gravity, It's Another Force 1:45:20 Surprise Guest: NASA's Charles Buehler 1:49:23 Buehler's Thrust Results in Hard Vacuum 1:54:03 400 Volts and the Townsend Brown Link 1:56:52 Gravity A and Gravity B Explained 1:58:14 Burkhard Heim and the Sixth Force 2:02:34 Element 115 and Bob's Lab Work at S4 2:04:16 Telling Gene Huff and John Lear 2:10:47 John Lear: Pilot, Friend, Wild Card 2:17:49 Jacques Vallée's Falling Out with Bob 2:19:11 Defending the MIT and Caltech Claims 2:21:37 United Nuclear and Government Contracts 2:26:40 The UFO Cabal and Organized Crime Ties 2:35:54 Epstein, Los Alamos, and Exotic Science 2:43:14 Bob's Current Lab Research Revealed 2:44:33 Why Bismuth Keeps Showing Up in UFOs 2:55:00 Identifying Element 115 at S4 3:05:54 Relativistic Electrons and Spacetime 3:12:59 Five Heart Attacks and the Toll of Disclosure 3:15:31 Luigi's Sacrifices Making the S4 Film 3:19:08 Closing: The Future of UFO Science Securities and brokerage services offered by Kraken Securities LLC, member FINRA/SIPC. 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Starting point is 00:00:34 and we'll tell you right up front that it's going to be hard to swallow at first. In 1989, a soft-spoken scientist in Nevada went on local television and said something that would baffle the world for the next three decades. He said that he had worked at a secret government facility called S4, just south of Area 51 in the Nevada desert, where his job, his actual job, was to reverse engineer the propulsion system of a craft, a craft that was not made by human hands, a flying saucer, 53 feet in diameter, no seams, rivets, panels, buttons, wiring, or controls.
Starting point is 00:01:19 Ladies and gentlemen, today's guest is the white whale of American alchemy guests, the enigmatic and ever-elusive Bob Luzar. Robert Lazar, Robert Lazzar, Bob Lazzar, Bob Lazzar, Bob Lazzar, Bob Lazzar, that Lizarre dude freak me to f***g out, man. He's a freak out. Bob is basically a walking paradox, a human head spinner. He almost feels like an optical illusion of a person. Back then, A-Rae 51 meant nothing.
Starting point is 00:01:49 We've now heard a former director of National Intelligence, who oversaw all American intelligence agencies, openly discuss a year-year-old. discuss a UFO tracking program housed at Area 51 specifically. We've also seen past directors of the CIA, congressmen and women, and whistleblowers across agencies, endorsing the existence of a decades-long, multi-generational UFO crash retrieval and reverse engineering program. But Bob is an anomaly. He's on an island. He's still the only person to have gone public, claiming he worked directly on a craft of non-human origin. We've speculated about his story for years. Today, we get to talk to him directly.
Starting point is 00:02:37 They really wanted to see if they could affect the flow of time. Did they have a stated purpose for... No. In this interview, we get to ask him our most skeptical questions about his background, his education, his past, how he knows what he knows and why he hasn't been forced in. to silence. John Lear was super into UFOs before you got the job. Why do you think it didn't come up in a background check? There are a lot of people out there who say you faked your educational
Starting point is 00:03:09 credentials. Did you ever wonder why they didn't view you as a liability? But we also ask our most awe-inspiring questions. We learned new details about where the craft he worked on was actually retrieved. We discussed the beings that may have occupied it, where they come from, and what they want with humanity. We even learn about Bob's current home laboratory experiments. He's still investigating the gravity-altering force he encountered while working on a flying saucer in the 80s. You heard me right.
Starting point is 00:03:44 Bob is currently working on exotic UFO science in his personal lab. How did the reactor work? Through x-rays, we were able to determine that there's a hollow tube. But this interview gets even critical. crazier than that. I surprised Bob with a scientist at NASA who's doing his own experiments on anti-gravity. What kind of voltage are you using? Right now, I have a four-hundred bolts. That's unbelievable. I also had the honor of showing Bob, legendary never-before-seen footage of a UFO at Area 51. People have been trying to get their hands on this specific footage for years.
Starting point is 00:04:26 Ready? Yeah. I'm going to the beginning. Here we go. Holy moly. Oh, shit. This interview spans multiple days with both Bob and filmmaker Luigi Venditelli, the maker of S4, the Bob Lazzar story. Luigi has spent four years working closely with Bob to depict exactly what he saw and worked on at S4, in vivid, hyper-realistic detail. We really, really paid attention to what Bob said throughout the entire time.
Starting point is 00:04:59 So we didn't invent anything. Without further ado, please welcome this week's American Alchemist. The man who helped reverse engineer a UFO, went public, and lived to tell the tale. The original UFO whistleblower, Bob Lazare. We're living through the biggest transformation of the financial system in 100 years, and most people are still using the same platforms their parents. used. I started to investigate the financial space in 2012 because I genuinely believed that the Fiat dollar system was broken, not slightly broken, structurally, fundamentally broken. It's what you
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Starting point is 00:07:43 Again, that's crackin.com slash aAA-A-A. Owning the power of your money isn't just a belief. It's the whole point. One of the main reasons I'm able to go multiple hours on these podcasts while staying mentally sharp is because of this little drink. It's a product I started using years ago, and it's called Ketone IQ. I know the founders Jeff and Michael personally, and I was thrilled when they agreed to sponsor the show because it's one of the few products I trust to give me clean, sustainable energy.
Starting point is 00:08:17 I've been taking a little shot of this thing during every long recording, and it lights my brain on fire. As you can see, Bob even took a shot during this one. The reason I keep coming back to these products is because I don't really do coffee. Coffee gives me a spike of energy, and then at some point I get jittery and I crash. Ketone IQ is fundamentally different. It gives you clean, steady mental clarity with no crowsy. trash and no jitters. Here's the science behind why it actually works.
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Starting point is 00:10:17 I have so many questions for you because there are a lot of people who say they've seen things in the sky or they've had ephemeral experiences, sometimes even with beings. There are very few people who have consistently held to the exact same story over the last almost four decades now. And it involves working on a craft in essentially reverse engineering or parallel process engineering what is a craft of non-humaning. human origin, an exotic craft. And so you are really one of one. And I can't wait to dive in. And I just want to think before we start, Luigi Vendateli, who is the amazing creator of this movie that you are in.
Starting point is 00:11:03 Physical evidence now exists, which proves that there is life elsewhere. And at least one form of that life has been here. I want to start with your childhood. And what was little Bob Lazar like? I guess he was like a little scientist. I mean, I wasn't into sports at all. Still aren't. Instead of playing with toys, I take apart clocks and things like that
Starting point is 00:11:30 that my parents had and, you know, put them back together. I was just very inquisitive. Were you a rule breaker at all? Yeah, for the most part. I really had a problem with authority. So I really didn't matter if it was my parents or teachers, whatever telling me what to do. I said, I just don't recognize your authority to tell me.
Starting point is 00:11:50 me that I can't do what I'm doing. And yeah, that's, that just seems to be part of my DNA. Yeah, it seems to be a running theme in your life. So authority felt sort of arbitrary to you. It's like, why are you in a position to have any power? Right, right, right. You're not even, you really don't even understand what I'm up to. And, you know, you're already trying to put the gabbash on it here. So, no, go, go away and leave me alone. Yeah. Yeah. Did you have any interest in UFOs, aliens, anything like that as a kid? No, no, no. I thought that was all silly.
Starting point is 00:12:23 Yeah. I was always into science and science fiction when I was a little kid. I watched, I think, like five and six. I watched that, oh, the super marionation series like Fireball XL5 and Thunderbirds. And, you know, they were all like marionette shows, but they're all space and cool and rockets. And, you know, this is all great. Yeah. You know, that's what.
Starting point is 00:12:49 And then later on, you know, Star Trek, science fiction, because it always looked like that it was just a prediction of the future to me. It didn't look like it was, you know, stuff that was never going to come true. It just looked like eventually the stuff's going to happen. And for the most part, science fiction turns into science, given enough time. Become science fact. Yeah. Were there any inspiration sci-fi-wise that you felt had like a real,
Starting point is 00:13:17 impact on you as far as you're, you know, what you were interested in as a kid? You know, everybody my age of boomer that's an engineer, doctor, scientist, whatever, they'll always point back to Star Trek and always give that a nod because that was. So that was probably the biggest thing back there in the 60s and 70s. Yep. And so where'd you grow up? Well, I was born in Florida, but most of my growing up, you know, or I was cognizant of what was going on. It was a Long Island.
Starting point is 00:13:48 Okay. New York, yeah. Interesting. You ended up at Pierce, is that right? What was the kind of progression from the childhood? I just moved around. Okay. You know, it depends where I was at the time when I went California and, you know, on the East Coast.
Starting point is 00:14:04 So it was just location dependent. You know, like I mentioned the other day, I moved so much. Yeah. Yeah, it was almost like a military family. Yeah. Was it? Because your dad had jobs that he was switching around or what was going on? You know, I really don't know what it was.
Starting point is 00:14:23 But we were just always moving. Yeah, interesting. And, you know, always have to make new friends and whatnot. But I don't know. It was just the way it was. My father always did some weird things that strange things up his sleeve. So I don't know what was going on. Yeah, I think there was some potentially shady stuff going.
Starting point is 00:14:46 on in the background. Interesting. Okay. What did he do professionally, just like surface level? He had, I know he had some connection to the mob at some point. I mean, he had like a food business, a wholesale food business, you know, that distributed food to grocery stores, you know, all over the place. But there was, and he had big connection to race horses. I mean, I remember when I was a lot.
Starting point is 00:15:16 little kid of the what they call it harness racing you know where they sit in a little sulky behind the horse little two-wheeled contraption you know I remember those guys the jockeys riders whatever you want to call them but I remember you know playing in the living room and hearing those guys deciding who's going to win the race and things of that sort So, I mean, I knew that there were some shady things going on. Yeah, whenever you have racehorses and tracks, there's often some money laundering. Yeah, especially back down in the, you know, early 70s and stuff. It couldn't, it couldn't be more corrupt.
Starting point is 00:16:00 Absolutely. Interesting. Okay. And so he was involved in that, but maybe there was some other stuff kind of going on in the background. Yeah, and I think where people are hurt or anything like that, you know, not mob. stuff but uh yeah yeah but you know i mean just some questionable things yeah yeah yeah never talked about yeah so i mean we did we did move around a lot but um spent most of the time either in well it really depends what year you know i was somewhere and were were you into nuclear science
Starting point is 00:16:34 as a kid as well or just kind of like science no just science i mean okay my friends were uh had a friend whose dad was a chemistry professor, so, you know, we'd go and hang out with him and bring home chemicals and, you know, play with him. But it was, yeah, from as young as I could possibly be, was always tinkering around with something science-related. Yeah. So at school, what was that like? You're this rebellious kid. You're into science. Did you hate school? Yeah, yeah. I hate at school because it's just interfering with my time. I want to get home and get back to tinkering with my stuff. You know, I don't, you know, you couldn't bore me any more than I was. I didn't want to go to music class. I don't care what they're doing here. And on, you know, everything of social studies,
Starting point is 00:17:23 I don't care who won what war. Just let me go home. You know, I've got other things I'd rather learn. But, you know, the classes that I was in, that matched my interest I did well with, but everything else is a waste of my time. What were you tinkering with at home? Probably at that time. probably electronics and chemistry. Okay. And then how did you get the job at Los Alamos? At the time I was working at Fairchild Electronics in Seamy Valley, California. And I was just tired and burnt out of that.
Starting point is 00:18:00 And just sent a resume to Los Alamos. But really laid heavily on the stuff, not my work history, things that I did aside from work, I took my wife's little Honda, built a jet engine from scratch and put it in there. In fact, that was one of the things I, you know, sent in a resume to him. Oh, by the way, I built this car. And, yeah, when I moved there, the local paper put that on the front page because they thought that was really cool. And it's like most people remember me at that time because I drove it to work at Los Alamos.
Starting point is 00:18:41 Yeah. In fact, they yelled at me for you can't run the jet coming into the lab because it scares the shit out of everybody. How fast would the car go? $212. Jesus. Yeah, yeah. On that car is super dangerous. I would never do that today.
Starting point is 00:18:54 That's insane. Yeah. So you're putting like a Bugatti engine on a Honda Civic and you're like saying? Yeah, in a way, yeah. Unbelievable. Yeah, it's silly. But you're stupider when you're in your 20s, yeah. Well, what was your top speed?
Starting point is 00:19:08 $212. Yours was $212. Yeah. You went 212. Elmuraj Dry Lake in California. You're insane. Maybe, but that's how that's the car went. But the Honda Civic is not set up for the jet engine that you put on it.
Starting point is 00:19:25 Well, it was after I put it in there. Oh, so you helped with the suspension and some of that stuff. You improved. Wow. That's impressive, man. That's cool. Well, while working at Los Alamos National Lab in 1982, the local newspaper did a front page story on a jet car I had built.
Starting point is 00:19:45 Coincidentally, Dr. Edward Teller was giving a speech at Los Alamos that same day. So Edward Teller for the audience was the creator of the hydrogen bomb. Coincidentally, that same day on the paper, if you turn over the front sheet, was the
Starting point is 00:20:03 advertisement for Ed Teller coming the next day. Wow. Giving a lecture at the lab. So you go to a talk he gives or something? Yeah, he was about to give a talk. I got there early. He's sitting outside reading the paper because the door was locked. So I wanted to go super early too because I thought maybe it's going to be crowded or whatever.
Starting point is 00:20:29 He's reading the front page of the paper because or else I really didn't know how to go and say anything, but I went, oh, it's the perfect segue. He's already reading about me. So I was like, I, Ed, I'm the guy you're reading about there. What was Edward Teller like? Is it grumpy old man. It's the only way I could describe him. Did he have any sort of distinct accent or facial?
Starting point is 00:20:53 Of course he has a distinct accent. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. I mean, he looked exactly like himself. Yeah, yeah, yeah, fascinating.
Starting point is 00:21:05 And so what was the conversation like? Are you like, hey, that, you know, that's me and then what did he, what did he say? I said, well, that's, that's fascinating, but, you know, I can't remember it verbatim, But it is grossly impractical. I said, yeah, it's not made to be a practical, you know, motor transportation. And we only spoke for a short time, and then you can hear the door uncliq, swing open, and a guy greeted him, oh, Mr. Teller, and so they brought him in. Aha.
Starting point is 00:21:34 And, you know, that was that. But as time went on, I made reference to that meeting when I sent him a resume after I had moved on from Los Alamos. and he remembered me, and that's who directed me to EG and G and how this all started to go to S-FOR. Have you ever seen there's a video of Edward Teller being questioned on his relationship with you? Yeah, yeah, of course. Because he, first of all, he goes into, he's being questioned on nuclear propulsion, and he, like, doesn't want to get into it. It's very clear. And then he's questioned on you, and he has the exact same reaction.
Starting point is 00:22:14 It is, in my opinion, I'm not interesting. I don't intend to answer it. If you ask you that question on the camera, I will shut up. I will sit silent. You're not going to get an answer on me on that. Okay. And if I ask you on camera, if you know Bob Lazare, can you just say no? I will sit silently.
Starting point is 00:22:39 I mean, I spoke to the guy before he went and interviewed, tell her. He was one of tell her students. And he said, you know, I'm going to bring up you to tell her. And I went, that would be awesome. Yeah. And it would be awesome to see how fast he denies me. Yeah. You know, and he did immediately.
Starting point is 00:23:02 But he denied you in the same way. First, he goes, yeah, technically you could get, you know, a real power source from nuclear. And basically implying he knows a lot about it, but he's not going to talk about it. Yeah. I think he said, yeah, is there anything other than fish and. refusion. That's right. No, nothing that anybody interested about. Yeah, but there's total annihilation, you know, and yeah, he just completely discounted that, which is interesting for Teller. Do you think that he's talking about, because you talk about this 1.15, you had a
Starting point is 00:23:34 I don't know if that's what he's referring to. And then you get this matter, anti-natter annihilation thing. I don't know if that would it was referring to, but he's also, but he's clearly not addressing the most powerful nuclear reaction there is and why would he do that and he's clearly also denying the nuclear knowledge in the same way that he's denying his link to you yeah which to me is such a tell that he obviously met you yeah that it's really weird that he would do that and so you were you were at los almos and and um were you working with other physicists at the time or what was your main kind of like day-to-day responsibility there Well, it changed.
Starting point is 00:24:17 I was building, I think, this was for the particle accelerator. They wanted to be able to trim the voltage to a very fine degree. So I was building some high voltage power supplies, stuff that's insulated by fiber optic, so you can make adjustments from a distance without interfering with, you know, the electric fields or anything. And day-to-day, there was just maintenance on the targets and experiments we were doing, so it's cryogenic and, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:53 dealing with high-power magnets. And, I mean, what else? Radioactors' materials. Yeah. You know, Los Alamos stuff. Yeah. I mean, I'm just trying to remember what I did every day, but it was nothing.
Starting point is 00:25:09 It was, there was no really, regular routine. You know, we'd either be working on getting ready to do an experiment, so we'd be working on, you know, the detection equipment. Yeah. Or setting up the experiment. And it all had to do with, you know, the output of the accelerator and adjusting that. So this was a particle accelerator?
Starting point is 00:25:36 Yeah, yeah. Oh, interesting. Yeah, it's a half mile long linear accelerator in Los Alamos. Oh, cool. And the beam splits off. It comes down and it splits off into different experimental areas. So you can conduct a whole bunch of different experiments, you know, just from one beam. And they can put different things in the targets to make different particles and go different directions.
Starting point is 00:26:01 And depending on the speed of the particle going by and its spin and how long it's in transit, you can calculate its mass and, you know, backtrack and then put things. together and, you know, analogy I always gave was, uh, it's, it's like if you wanted to analyze a Swiss watch, but you really couldn't look inside, but, so you could take it and throw it as hard as you can
Starting point is 00:26:27 at a concrete wall. Yeah. And then it bust apart and all the pieces go flying off. Yeah. Well, by looking at those pieces, you could backtrack everything. Yeah. You could see if one was spinning a certain direction and you know the rotation and the, how fast it came off, then you know the mass of it, if it was turning before, and by the angles, you can put it back there, and eventually you can reassemble the thing and see how it was made just from the particles flying apart. So essentially would an accelerator to smash something apart,
Starting point is 00:26:58 and then we can figure out how it all goes together just by monitoring those particles. It's so cool. Yeah. So, I mean, that's what I did at Los Alamos. Did you get the sense that there were two? branches of science, science that was a little more classified, and then public science? No, not at that point. Not at that point. I thought we were all on the same level. Yeah. Now, I know you can't say why they erased you from MIT. And there are a lot of people out there who say you faked your educational credentials. You have a very good, I think, reason that
Starting point is 00:27:36 at least passes, you know, Joe Rogan and some other people who I really trust their sniff test. He said that he was working on something for the government at, and they sent him to MIT to learn something. But I will ask you, is there anything you can say high level that hints at why you can't talk about why you're at MIT? Well, I was sent there. Okay. And if you're sent like there for a specific reason, Maybe to do some classified research or work. Yep.
Starting point is 00:28:17 It's going to be off the books. Yeah, I mean, but it's also, you also can't talk about it because it's still, I mean, look, the government's never going to come and prosecute me for, at least I hope not, for releasing information about S4. Yep. But assuming I was working on a weapon system, that's always, it's still covered under. the security agreement. And at this point in my life, I just don't want to make any waves. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, no, I think that's very reasonable. It's also, I should note, and this is me talking and not you, MIT long is a university, you know, affiliated research center. It's called the U-Arc. And they do all sorts of classified stuff. You know, they have a super soldier
Starting point is 00:29:04 program. They're, you know, we're always at the forefront of nanotechnology. And so, the idea that, Well, anything I would have potentially been working on, I wouldn't be so outlandish as super soldiers or it'd be just very conventional. Sure. You know, but still classified material. Yeah. I think it's just helpful because this stuff is circulating out there. And, you know, the idea that you would get sent to that school specifically and work on something that you can't talk about is very feasible. sent, but if I would have gotten sent.
Starting point is 00:29:42 Hypothetically. You got sent there. If I got sent there, you know, yeah, there's a very clear possibility. I wouldn't be able to talk about it and I'd be working on some classified stuff. If you wanted to hire a guy who could think clearly out of the box
Starting point is 00:29:57 and help solve problems, but who could be discredited if you needed to do that, Bob was probably the best person in the country at the time. He was perfect for it. George Knapp was originally this very instrumental part, of breaking your story in 1989 as part of KLAS.
Starting point is 00:30:17 Did you, you took him to Los Alamos? Is that right at some point? Yeah, I told him all this Los Alamos stuff and I said, well, let's go there, I'll show you. And security was a little more lax back then. So we got in a plane and you just rented a car
Starting point is 00:30:37 and, you know, at that time, everyone I knew still worked there. So including the guards, we're going to, hey, Bill, Bob, you're back, you know. And so we're in and, you know, just took charge everywhere. There's my desk. Here's this. And, you know, walking here. And I still knew combinations to places.
Starting point is 00:30:57 Right. I'm sure it was not all 100% legal. But, yeah, George just walked around, filmed everything, spoke to people that I worked with. And he said, all right, we can check that box off. And then we went back. Yeah. Yeah. And so, because I also, you know, again, I want to address some of these, like, detracting comments circulating online. There are people who are like, oh, he just quizzed the physicists, you know, at Los Alamos, but he really had some other job there or something. First of all, like your description of a particle accelerator and how to actually, you know, detect subatomic particles, I think was, you know, first class. And then second, you have a guy in George Knapp, which you are, You have to either accuse him of some sort of collusion or something in his orientation towards you or admit that you showed him around.
Starting point is 00:31:51 People knew your name. You know, he saw it. Yeah. Yeah. And clearly he was trying to suss you out by asking you to invite him, right? Presumably. Yeah. Yeah, I just don't pay attention to the detractors and the nonsense.
Starting point is 00:32:04 I mean, to me, we're past that. Now, I never met Dr. Teller again, but in 1988, when I decided to reenter the scientific community, I sent him in a resume and inquired about a job. Dr. Teller responded by telephone and told me that he was no longer active, but just functioned in a chief consultant capacity. He gave me the name of a contact to call in Las Vegas. I made that call, and things progressed from there until I got into the program at S4. And so you sent him the resume, and he remembers you somehow.
Starting point is 00:32:38 Yeah, because I made mention of the jet car in Los Alamos. And then he sends your resume to EG and G and then you get a job there? I don't know if he sent it. He, when he did reply to me, he gave me contact information for EG and G. So I don't know if he said or just have a look at this young man or something like that. Or if he did send the resumes. I don't know what happened behind the scenes. Did you know anything about EG and G at the time?
Starting point is 00:33:08 I know they did measurements. they did all the, I mean, those are the guys that came out and figured how to, you know, photograph, you know, an exploding nuclear bomb without it getting overexposed. They did all kinds of things, make giant flash tubes so you can photograph cities from bombers and stuff. So that's about all I knew. I knew they were just, you know, a contractor that did weird stuff for the government. Yeah. But, you know, leaning heavily in the nuclear testing. area. It's a company that is the namesake of Doc Edgerton, who was MIT faculty, actually.
Starting point is 00:33:48 And Edgerton, Grimmerhausen, and Greer. There you go. Many types of cameras will be in use. The most important are fast packs, which operate up to 9,000 frames per second and expose their entire footage in a fraction of a second. Have you looked at any of the other, you know, obviously you're really into nuclear, and then you worked on UFOs. There's this amazing book, that I always cite that I'm sure you're aware of Luigi called UFOs and nukes by a friend of mine named Robert Hastings. And he talks about UFOs like tick, tic, tacks, saucers, orbs, all these different shapes and sizes of UFOs showing up at nuclear bases all across the U.S. I've certainly heard that. Isn't that interesting?
Starting point is 00:34:29 And they're 167 whistleblowers who are on what's called the PRP program where they have to report if they're taking ibuprofen because they're guarding the crown jewels of American defense. Oh, really? 167 of these guys. Wow. Yeah. There's really 167 of those guys? 167 of these guys. It's really why.
Starting point is 00:34:49 And they have T. Yeah. That's incredible. I mean, that should be investigated further. And I'm sure it is, but not publicly. But, I mean, you're talking about nuclear sites. If you're talking about nuclear sites, you are at the very core of national security. So my point is, is if you're doing the photography of that early on.
Starting point is 00:35:10 on, you've got to have some asymmetric knowledge of UFO stuff. That would be my guess. Yeah, they were the guys documenting and photographing everything from every angle from everywhere. Yes. So if, in fact, all that stuff was going on, EG had to catch something. Totally. And EGG, it keeps coming up for me, too, in my own investigations. Even there's this thing called the, you know, the Wilson Davis memo where the scientist who actually lives in Austin, his name is Eric Davis meets with the head of J2 joint chiefs, under whose purview is all military technology, a guy named Admiral Thomas Wilson.
Starting point is 00:35:51 And they're in the parking lot of EG&G, and Thomas Wilson is like furious that he doesn't have oversight over this specific corporate program, which seems to be reverse engineering exotic UFO material. So you get a job at EG&G, what's your first touch point there? and so you have a little bit of context, but... Yeah, I originally went in there.
Starting point is 00:36:15 I didn't know what the job was. Yeah. They interviewed me for that. And somewhere in the middle of it, they said, you know, we actually have a different job that we're thinking of plugging you into now. I think I went to the bathroom, and when I came back, they said,
Starting point is 00:36:29 we're changing channels. We think we have. And I think... So I don't know if they were both something at S-4 or... something else was going to be for EG and G&G or the Department of Naval Intelligence, and then they thought maybe S-4 would be a better fit. I don't know what, again, what went on behind the scenes, but there were two jobs there,
Starting point is 00:36:54 and they decided I'd be better off with the second one, and the second one was S-4 out at the Papus Lake area. And what were they screening for? Like, what do you think they were asking you and trying to get at, and then when you go to the bathroom, why do they shift? And they say, this guy is actually going to, that UFO thing we're stuck on. This guy's going to break it wide open. He could be a good higher there.
Starting point is 00:37:20 I don't think that's what they said. I think they were stuck. And I think they were, they kept, you know, just because of the way the place is arranged, they kept trying to attack the problem from the same direction all the time, you know. which is only going to yield the same result. In fact, if you expect it anything else, you're nuts. Yeah. It's the definition of crazy, right, doing the same thing
Starting point is 00:37:49 and expecting different results. But, yeah, most of their questions was not about my technical knowledge or work experience. It was what I did after work. And, you know, like the projects I built, why did you do that? And I think they were just looking at trying to find somebody that was outside of the box. Yeah. And I think that's where I fit because before that you had really straight-laced scientists, physicists, technicians, you know, that abided by the rules and all that. And they look, we need a little push from another direction.
Starting point is 00:38:31 And I mean, it's my guess. I think that's why they popped me in there. At that point, do you have any idea what you're getting yourself into? No. No. But, you know, they said it's at a remote area and the work hours can vary. Some people are out there for two weeks on, one week off. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:48 Some people, and, you know, it depends if they're married or not or anything and, you know, can spend that much time out there. Some people only go out three days a week and, you know, so, and some people are just on call. And, you know, for the time being, it would probably just probably need you sporadically going out there on call and, you know, until we get you. up to speed and do you have any problem with traveling? I said, no, no, no. You know, so I thought, wow, if it's out in the desert, it's probably, I thought it was, the only thing I knew about the desert was at that time it's a nuclear test site.
Starting point is 00:39:21 So I thought it was weapons related and, you know, specifically nuclear weapon related. And I was going to be at, you know, the nuclear test site at somewhere, you know, station near Mercury. The way it worked was they'd call me at Randolph, random days. And they'd say Mr. Lizard is now such and such time. We need you to come out today. So I'd go out there. I'd drive out to EG&G Special Projects, which was right in McCarron Airport at that time. I'd go through a little security there and then out on the tarmac and board one of the Janet flights. They were only used by the government for going back and forth to the test site.
Starting point is 00:40:05 My 363, Lodzviget Tower, runway 263, line up away, traffic downfield. Yeah, we just took off and landed. Yeah. And I still thought I was at the, you know, I didn't know it as Area 51. Yep. And you land at Area 51. Yeah. And first of all, at that time, Area 51 meant nothing.
Starting point is 00:40:29 It's just, this is known as Area 51, okay. As all the, you know, the test sites split up into areas. It's Area 2, Area 5. So it's 51. Okay. At what point do you go to us for? You know, these, I've told the story so much and it's been so long. All the days kind of mix and infuse into one now.
Starting point is 00:40:51 So I can't separate what you did on that day. What did you do on the third day? I don't know. Of course. But I don't think we drove down on the first day. I think it was just a paperwork and stuff day. But the second day for sure, we drove down. got in the bus and it was a long, bumpy ride.
Starting point is 00:41:12 And the windows were blacked out on the bus. And it was just a navy blue painted bus. And it seemed like we went south. By the time we got there, it got off the bus. I mean, the sun was setting to my right. And then what happens next? Well, I mean, you mean when I got there? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:32 Yeah. I mean, that's where were you, Dennis led me in. And who's Dennis for the audience? I guess you can call him my supervisor, but he was kind of my shadow and everything. He was just attached to me. This is Dennis Mariani. Dennis Mariani.
Starting point is 00:41:49 Yeah. And so he leads you in. Yeah, he leads me in. There's a guard there. We get past him, and then they had to train the hand reader to give me a card to open the doors. So that's the first time
Starting point is 00:42:06 saw that hand scanner. I get the card, he shows me, you swipe on the door and it records every time you come in and out and do everything. Is there a bodyguard or like a... No, no, once you're on the room with the scanner, there's nothing. There's just a door you open up,
Starting point is 00:42:21 but it's just a really long, really long carder. And just kind of, it's not modern, looks old, it's just painted cinderblock with light green and dark green. Kind of looked at my old kindergarten or something. It's this vast expanse, and is all of it underground or in a mountain? It's kind of on the side of a mountain. Okay. You know, it's so the hangars are right on the side, or it's a hill, I guess, however you want to describe it.
Starting point is 00:42:49 Sure. So the hangers are there, and then the corridor is in back of the hangars, so that gives you hanger access. And there were nine hangers, so, and they're fairly big, so that explains why the corridors were so long. Mm-hmm. And so you're in there, you see this vast expanse, then what happens? We went to review the briefings first. So that was off to the right. We came in. There was a desk there, somebody had already laid out all the briefings, which were summaries of the projects going on. So they didn't go in depth. But in case your project connected to some of these in some way, you had to have. a brief overview of what else was going on. Project Galileo was the first, you know, the first briefing on there.
Starting point is 00:43:42 And that was your project. Yeah. And then, but you had other briefings as well. Yeah, yeah. And that was project looking glass. Looking glass and what else? Sidekick. And sidekick. Okay.
Starting point is 00:43:53 Yeah. And so I imagine you take most interest in Galileo, but you also look through looking glass and sidekick. Yeah. Is that right? But Galileo dealt with the propulsion system of the craft and the directives that are given. There were two primary directives is one to duplicate the propulsion system or components thereof with available materials, available earth materials, it said. And directive two was to be able to remotely disable the operation of the system.
Starting point is 00:44:30 And some, I don't know how it was worded. Somewhere the word at all costs was in there. So that was really a high priority, but they wanted to, they certainly wanted to duplicate it, but they really wanted to disable it. I do think that's an important distinction in the mandate of the program. It's to not necessarily reverse engineer, but to parallel engineer, find ways to with,
Starting point is 00:45:00 terrestrial normal prosaic engineering build. Yeah, or come up with a hybrid system. Something, yeah, I mean, the bottom line is we want to produce the effects this machine is having. So just do it. In any, yeah, however you can. Just do it. Which makes sense given the skill set they seem to take interest in with you because you are this outside of the box thinker. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:29 You're not this prim and proper traditional academic or something who does not want to break rules, who might be extremely high IQ, but isn't necessarily rebellious in the way they think within these sort of narrow confines they're given. Yeah, they were just looking to come at another angle and maybe we can, you know, uncover something. And just for the audience, what is sidekick and what is Project looking glass? Sidekick was the weapon potential of the craft. The craft, if you're familiar with it, has three of the emitters on the bottom, look like large trash cans. And they send out the gravity waves
Starting point is 00:46:11 or whatever form of energy is. But, excuse me, sidekick dealt with using those to focus a particle beam to stop it from diverging. So it was, it appeared to be, there was, some sort of weapon potential of doing that. Like a directed energy weapon.
Starting point is 00:46:32 Yeah, I think it was a particle weapon. So I don't know what the source was, but that's just what the briefing contained in it. Make Mother's Day even more special at Whole Foods Market. Kick off brunch or dinner with quality cheese and charcutory with no synthetic nitrates. Then go seafood. There's an abundance on sale at Whole Foods Market,
Starting point is 00:46:56 where it's all sustainable while caught are responsibly farmed. At the bakery, grab seasonal treats like their strawberry pretzel cream pie, and you can't go wrong with a ready-to-heathe Kish Lorraine, deviled eggs, and fresh-cut fruits to go. Celebrate Mom with Whole Foods Market. Are you given any other context before reading these documents? No. And when you're reading these documents, what's going through your pie?
Starting point is 00:47:20 No, I mean, some of the stuff in there was just nonsense. I mean, and you wonder, is this like a test? Right. You know, there are stuff like, you know, the aliens had made 65 corrections to, you know, in the evolution of humans and things. And as Barry explained to me, they said, look, they keep everything classified here. But if somebody says something, you know, and they hear it on the grapevine, they said, yeah, they've got a, disc and alien craft at, you know, down at the test site, they don't know where it comes from. But everybody that they give briefings or information to, they put unique nonsense information there.
Starting point is 00:48:06 So, like if I had said anything, they, you know, said, yeah, there's flying saucers down there and aliens made 65 corrections. They go, Lazars, the guy that. Yep. So that's, I think they put it in there to attach to a person, you know, he got this. and they make it something enticing to say. So you go through these briefings, what happens next? At some point, I went to the nurse who, it was the only female that was there. She said, you know, we have to do an allergen test.
Starting point is 00:48:40 And I guess they had a bunch of samples from different materials. They do a little grid on my arm and then just pricked them and, you know, waited for a reaction. they gave me something to drink, which is supposedly supposed to boost my immune system. It was a deep orange-yellow color, and I think that was because the vitamin B was in there, and I can taste that because it's really a nasty taste. What did it taste like? Like a vitamin B solution. Okay.
Starting point is 00:49:10 But it also had a pine taste to it. But anyway, that was that. I wasn't allergic to anything, as it turned out, and eventually going to go. in and was introduced to Barry, who's going to be my lab partner. And, you know, from what I understand, I was replacing somebody that he worked with. What was Barry like? Barry, I don't know, how would you describe Barry? Barry was very enthusiastic.
Starting point is 00:49:38 Yeah. He was really happy I was there and really excited to show me stuff. But clearly a lot had been done before I got there. Yeah. If this was new, everything would be white, right? Everybody would be in, you know, I mean, you always want labs and everything white in case you see a little speck of dust or a part fall somewhere you can identify them. You wouldn't have, you know, wooden lamp or lab benches and things like that.
Starting point is 00:50:08 You'd probably have people in full respirator suits if they're just beginning. But these guys had reached a point where it was nonchalant, where they were touching. you know, working with this stuff and, you know, it really wasn't a thing. They were taking part of a car engine. So they had made a lot of progress and they weren't afraid of what they were working with, although we were plenty afraid of the reactor. And at no point where you like this could be some, like, you know, anti-gravity secret program that, you know, I just wasn't cleared to.
Starting point is 00:50:46 No. Okay. I mean, initially when I first saw it, I was. went, oh, that's what this whole thing's about, you know, it's, it's just, it's just our new fighter. And it looks like a flying saucer. So that's why people believe in flying saucers, because they see these new fighters flying around. And, you know, but, yeah, it became quickly obvious that that wasn't the case. Like, we have no idea how the thing works. It does stuff that's physically impossible. And there's no country in the world could make something like that.
Starting point is 00:51:18 or have the power density that it has. It's inconceivable. So to, you know, to affect space and time. Look if another country was able to build something like that, the United States wouldn't exist, you know. To anybody who's a detractor who doesn't, who could think maybe this was a U.S. object, something man-made or something that they put there as a prop,
Starting point is 00:51:45 some people would say, do you think they were trying to deceive Lazar or other people and all that? Because I built it, there's one physical aspect of it that is impossible to build, period. 100% not possible. As far as if we have to consider it being a 50 to almost 53 foot diameter craft, the main level, which is the level that Bob was able to access and at one point stand up in the middle of, That main level is in the center of the disk, and there is nothing that was visually witnessed on the bottom level when he peaked
Starting point is 00:52:28 that is a supporting column holding that 53-foot diameter floor. We have nothing on earth. There is no material. You know, that's the first I've ever heard of that angle. That's really interesting. That's right. build it. I think you know more about the craft at this point.
Starting point is 00:52:51 Because of the thickness of the floor that we could see because of the lip of the access way, we could see the thickness of the floor. Also where the honeycomb hatchway is, you could see the thickness of the floor. That thickness. Yeah, 52 feet diameter. There is nothing on earth that would not be doing boring like this and maybe and potentially collapse. There's nothing.
Starting point is 00:53:18 We have nothing. That's a completely unique structural phenomenon. Good job, Luigi. Yeah. Yeah, no, I never, never even entertained that. That's fascinating. Yeah, that's great. But that's 100% true.
Starting point is 00:53:37 Yeah. There's nothing that can do that. Yeah. That's so interesting. What is the color of the craft itself? It's kind of a pewter, stainless-looking, but. It's, Luigi and I were talking about this the other day.
Starting point is 00:53:55 It looks different close up than it does far away. Describe, how self. Geez, I wish I could. I've tried to describe this a lot. And what's interesting is that I, my friend Gene Huff, who was my kind of confidant at the time. And, you know, I tell him about,
Starting point is 00:54:18 this stuff. And I said, you know, one of the weirdest things is if you're, if you're close to it, you know, it, it looks like the craft. And when you get far away, it doesn't look right. It looks more like a cartoon. And so Luigi is spending two and a half or three years of modeling this and getting it in a, and sure as hell, whatever they did, Luigi will probably best tell you about that. When they take the camera and they put it in the hangar and look at it close up, it looks like it should. And if they back it off, it doesn't look the same. It looks.
Starting point is 00:54:57 So they were able to, whether intentionally or accidentally, kind of duplicate it. I mean, they've got the model so close that it has, it's taken on some of the characteristics of the actual craft. And there's a part of the craft that you describe as blacker than black. Is that right? Yeah. What is that? Yeah. You know what they call the port holes around the top?
Starting point is 00:55:20 Sure. I do not believe are port holes. You know, and I think there's a black ring that goes around the top part of the craft, and we call that the insulator ring. Above that, I have no idea what's in that top section, but that's where these small square slash rectangular holes are around. They are assumed to be like some sort of planer array. where there is something similar to a computer in the top section,
Starting point is 00:55:52 and those arrays determine whether it's looking at starlight or whatever, it determines its place and space. But they don't look black. They look so black, and it's not just vantablack at all. They almost look like bottomless pits in there. But I know they're solid. I mean, Barry told me they're solid. I guess I don't know.
Starting point is 00:56:20 Barry claimed they're solid, so to be technical, I don't know for a fact. I mean, but I still think there's some kind of sensors, but that is some unusual material. And when you go in there and look at the craft, it's a real ominous, creepy feeling, and a lot of it is because of the black. It doesn't look right.
Starting point is 00:56:44 Did anybody else say that going into the craft gave them an ominous feeling. Yeah, he did say it was definitely unnerving, I think was his word, looking at those. And just being in the craft generally, was that like a kind of ubiquitously known thing at S4? Like, you walked into that thing? I didn't hear that from anybody, but it certainly was for me. Interesting. Yeah, because the first thing you think, boy, that must have been so exciting.
Starting point is 00:57:11 And yeah, from an outsider, it might be. But no, when you're really there, it wasn't exciting. It was really frightening. And you walked around what looked like the cockpit of this thing? First of all, you can't just walk in. It's much smaller and narrower than you think. You have to crawl in, and you really can't stand up until you're almost right in the center.
Starting point is 00:57:34 So it doesn't have really, it's really all unusable space. Even if you're a small creature, there's a lot of unusable space in there. And, you know, because everything seemed to have a critical function to it. I'm sure there was nothing for decoration. There's a reason to have all that space and the reason the craft is shaped like that. But there were three things that look like seats. We called them seats, other humps, large rectangular smooth objects in there. There were three of those.
Starting point is 00:58:11 we know those to be the amplifiers. They work with the reactor. It amplifies the gravity wave and it's channeled to the emitter, which is right under the amplifiers. Again, we just called the seats because they look like seats. I think it would be funny if it turned out that they were not seats at all. Yet another component we just knew nothing about. Bob always found it to be really weird
Starting point is 00:58:41 that when the wave guide is applied right on top of the reactor, these two guys, they're looking out. There's one of the archways that become transparent, so he believes that maybe that is where they're looking. But this guy here is staring at a pipe. Oh, the archway becoming transparent is so they can see. Yeah. Oh, it's so interesting.
Starting point is 00:59:05 I never made that connection. Yeah, they're looking at it. Oh. And there's a screen that appears. screen with a symbol with the like Korean like language yeah and then I I've always thought and I thought maybe they all become transparent maybe the whole archer like the whole all the archways can become transparent what why why would it only be one because so dark in there fascinating and you saw a translucent like almost Korean looking symbols is that right yeah I saw
Starting point is 00:59:36 the wall become translucent and at some point saw some kind of what I would call symbols. But not on a three-dimensional way, not on a flat screen or anything like that. Yeah, explain how you saw it because you were explaining it to me yesterday. Yeah, it wasn't like it was a screen. It was just like it was a three-dimensional character sitting in here. Almost like a projection, you said. Yeah, I...
Starting point is 01:00:06 He was explaining it to me yesterday because he explained it actually better. yesterday than before I produced it. And you were saying it felt it looked almost like a projection on that area. It wasn't a projection or it was on something. It was just a three-dimensional thing in the air. Describe the day that you saw this thing fly. It was already out. Barry and I were in the lab.
Starting point is 01:00:38 And then Dennis came in and he said, hey, why don't you guys come? We're doing a test flight. You know, so, oh, this is great. So we go out through the lab door right into the hangar. It was already outside sitting on the ground. And shortly after we got out there, oh, I did notice there was a radio,
Starting point is 01:00:59 and I mentioned this in Luigi's movie, a VHF radio and they're in communication. So it made me almost positive that there was somebody in the craft. Yep. I don't know how, where they'd be sitting or how they would, why they're even in the craft, because like I said, it's so uncomfortable and usable space, they'd have to be hunched up or trying to sit on the edge of one of those seats. So that put aside. So you think they put a person in there?
Starting point is 01:01:31 I think so, because they were communicating back and forth. Did you hear a voice? Yeah. Whoa. Yeah, yeah. So you heard a voice coming from the craft. No, from the radio. From the radio, from the VHF radio, but presumably coming from the craft.
Starting point is 01:01:45 Yeah. Wow. Yeah. So he was monitoring. I mean, they must have had some other instrumentation set up on the crafts because he was monitoring something. Do you remember with the voice? Not a thing. But it was something.
Starting point is 01:01:57 I mean, I was more stuck on the fact that how is a radio way of getting into the craft? This doesn't even make any sense. VHF being very high frequency? Yeah. I mean, it should be distorted by the gravity wave going around it. Anyway, shortly after the craft began to lift off the ground silently, had a little corona discharge glow on the bottom, and lifted off and drifted up into the sky and kind of moved around.
Starting point is 01:02:27 During that test flight, Dennis motioned for me to come out and, you know, look up at it. And then he told me to walk forward, and the craft was just sitting there stationary. and I walked out underneath it, and he motioned for me to look up, I looked up and I couldn't see the craft. So I thought it flew away. And then he said, you know, come back. And, you know, I walked back and I just walked back.
Starting point is 01:02:57 It caught my attention. I see the edge of the craft. So if you move, you can see it. And if you walk underneath it, you can't. So you can clearly see it's bending the left. light you can see the sky above the craft so you can see that it's in its little envelope and then it kind of slid over to the left and right and then sat back down is what you saw did did it look like what we talk about when we talk about UFO videos and what we you know it's like look at the
Starting point is 01:03:31 you know nimitz 2004 fleer video or or even some of the maybe better example some of the optical videos which are often grainy and fuzzy, and maybe that's due to gravitational lensing or some sort of space time perturbation due to these effects that you're talking about. But when you're seeing this craft fly, are you thinking this is the UFO stuff that's like in the lore?
Starting point is 01:03:54 Yeah. You are. Wow. Yeah, for sure. Just because of the way that it can move, it can just negate. I mean, it's, I really don't know how to describe it. I mean, things like inertia really don't matter to it.
Starting point is 01:04:16 It just gets away with murder when it comes to flying. Did you ever think we are being tasked to figure out this reactor, even like, you know, the shape of the craft is sort of really confusing to us. How the hell do they know how to fly this thing? Yeah, yeah. That goes through your head. Like, you're like, are you, are you like? Yeah, well, I mean.
Starting point is 01:04:44 Yeah, like I said, you know, clearly they've, they've had a lot of time with this craft already. It could have been decades for all I know. So they're familiar with it. So, I mean, they knew the emitters have to be rotated, you know, to couple to the reactor. I mean, they knew how to fly it. So these guys were somewhat proficient with it. But it, so it would be your kind of base case assumption that now we have functional what you might call alien reproduction vehicles or UFOs that humans can fly.
Starting point is 01:05:20 If in 1987, 88, you had stuff that was, you know, we could at least test and you could go under them and stuff, then you would think that now we're probably, we've probably made much more progress, I assume, or what do you think? I do not think so, no. You don't think so? No. So you think we're, we can test these things and use them in a rudimentary ways, but we don't understand how they work. No, it's like the, you know,
Starting point is 01:05:49 analogy I gave, you know, you can go back to the 1800s and drop off a motorcycle. Yep. With the keys in it. And, you know, you can look at it and go, wow, that's never seen anything like that before. And look at the plastic fenders on it. And, wow, that's unusual material. And, you know, there's the key. And eventually, if you tinker with it long enough, someone's going to
Starting point is 01:06:12 turn the key and it's going to start. Yep. And they're going to go, okay, and we turn it off and go, all right, that's on and off. And, you know, eventually, just given time and human ingenuity, they're going to get it. It throttles here. And they'll become proficient at driving it. Yeah. But when it runs out of fuel, we're done. And when it comes right down to it, they can't even make that plastic fender. Right. So, yeah, so you can become proficient at using it. And I think that's where we are. We had some, knowledge of that, but I think I think if we had developed that technology, we would have absolutely already seen it.
Starting point is 01:06:52 We wouldn't be wasting one minute building a conventional fighter or other. Why? Why would you? And they say, oh, well, it's secret. Yep. So, jet engines were secret when we first came out with them and we built a whole fleet, you know, we'd
Starting point is 01:07:08 absolutely divert every resource we had to duplicating these things. Do you guys think there's any chance that the craft is flown with somebody's mind, some sort of mental It could very well be. Yeah. Because there was obviously no physical controls to it. Right.
Starting point is 01:07:27 When the craft was being tested, the only test I saw from close range, it was already out of the hangar. And when I went into the hangar, the bay doors between all the hangars were open. They had big, you know, there's the door that leads to the out. outside that's at an angle, but there's also big bay doors between all the hangers. Those were open for some reason. And when I came in to go witness that, I was able to look down and see that, boy, there's other, because there's nine of them all the way down there. What's going through your head and emotionally?
Starting point is 01:08:07 How do you feel? So where did they all come from? How could you, I mean, I could see you found one somewhere. There's a crash or whatever. You found one. And you don't find nine. I mean, where did they come from? None of them are damaged to any degree, although when I call the top hat had holes in it,
Starting point is 01:08:27 but it looks like it was shot, you know, a projectile. But it wasn't, you know, damage from, you know, crash or attempted landing. So where did all this stuff come from? There's so much missing to the story. Did they all look like the exact same sort of replica? No, each one was different. Okay. But the material all looked exactly the same.
Starting point is 01:08:51 The color, the sheen. So it looked like they were all made of the same material. So the reactors and the propulsion were all the same. The material was all the same, but the shapes were somehow different. Do you remember? I mean, maybe they're specialized craft, you know. You can take a step back from humanity and you go look at all the cars driving around. Well, you got a truck.
Starting point is 01:09:12 That's a real long thing. You look at a boltz wagon. It's like a little, you know, and you see a motorcycle gone, you know, they're all, but they all have the same somewhat type of engine, you know, internal combustion engine is powering them all, so they must have all different functions. And maybe that's just what we're looking at. It's just, yeah, and who says they're all men, maybe some of those things are drones of some kind. People associate you with the kind of Billy Meyer sports model, like, you know, the craft that looks like that. It looks exactly like that. like that. Like I thought
Starting point is 01:09:47 Billy Meyer was absolutely ridiculous because I've seen some of the pictures and this is what I mentioned to you the other day, UFO researcher syndrome. I think the initial pictures Billy Meyer took of the sport model
Starting point is 01:10:03 looking craft are 100% genuine. There's no way that there could be another one of those that just coincidentally looks exactly like what I call the sport. model. So I think he absolutely photographed that and it was real. And I think at the time he got a lot of attention and, you know, they printed books and everything. And I think as time went on, you kind of missed
Starting point is 01:10:29 that. And then he started making some models and taking some new pictures. And the other pictures look ridiculous. They do. It looks like, you know, and there's something about like dinosaurs in his book. And it looks like there's styrofoam balls all into it. And it. It looks like there's styrofoam balls all to it is, yeah, I found some more pictures, you know, come back. And, you know, so I think that's, you know, that's just a personal belief. Yeah. There's no way you can tell me that those original pictures aren't genuine. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:11:01 This is Euphoria Calvin Klein, the new elixir collection, featuring three perfume intense scents, inspired by a unique orchid accord paired with vanilla, each with its own distinct attitude, each with its own universe, bold delet. Sensual, woody, addictive, magnetic elixir, sweet and romantic like a lingering touch. Solar elixir, a radiant expression of joy, ultra-concentrated for amplified impact and lasting power. Find your euphoria. Discover the euphoria elixir collection by Calvin Klein. And so that's the craft. You worked on the eight other crafts. What did those look like? I could only see two clearly, because from the angle, all you can see.
Starting point is 01:11:45 is just a little piece, and then all you can just see is the hanger out there. But one looked like what I call the jello mold, which is more like a bun cake without the hole in the middle. And then the other one, as I previously mentioned, a top hat, like a carnival straw hat, and the brim had a hole in it. Is your immediate instinct humans didn't make these? Yeah. Yeah. At what point, do you not see like an American flag on one of them? Yeah, on the sport model.
Starting point is 01:12:22 I saw that like the first day that I went in. Okay. Was there any talk of how these crafts were retrieved? I know, I mean, I know the Navy got the sport model. And I think that was, from what Barry said, that was an archaeological dig, which, by the way, isn't in the desert, it's in the water. And if there's another term for an archaeological dig that's in the water, I don't know what it is.
Starting point is 01:12:50 I thought it's still a dig. But, yeah, that I don't know what body of water, if it was the ocean or a lake or what. But, yeah, that came from the water. Again, according to Barry, I didn't see this in documentation. But, yeah, that was happened upon by the Navy. And that's all I know. And that's, I just theorize that's how the Navy got in control of everything.
Starting point is 01:13:17 So what you constantly hear is, you know, you have things like, you know, Hughes Aircraft building the Glomar Explorer, which, you know, subsea, you know, a discovery. And you have some, some actually more, more recent Lockheed subsea, you know, super subsea submarines and drone sort of things that seem to be able to, you know, scan the se floor. And there's a great book called The Silent War by John Pena Craven. And he was high up in the Navy. And he talks about retrieval of exotic technology on the seafloor. And I wonder, you know, you have Tim Burchett as a congressman from Tennessee who says there are five hotspots in oceans all around the world. You know, we think they're coming in from way out.
Starting point is 01:14:03 Maybe they did millennial go, but they're here. And they're in these deep water areas. And that's why, I mean, like we say, we're going. We know more about the face of the moon than we do what's going on there. And we have a higher propensity of sightings around these five or six, I believe, deep area, deep water areas. And I don't know. There's another, I have one friend in the Navy who's, you know, anonymous source. Maybe one day we'll do an interview.
Starting point is 01:14:31 But he talks about the movie, The Abyss by James Cameron. Yeah, yeah. And he says maybe that scene where, you know, this sort of glowing object shows up, isn't, too far off from the truth. Look, one of our science fiction movies is going to be correct. That's right. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's a safe bet.
Starting point is 01:14:49 Yeah, one of them is. Yeah, and we were talking last night with Luigi about Pascagoula, Missouri was the site of the production of nuclear subs for the Navy. And you have a famous case there of some fishermen who, you know, experience an alien abduction and have a UFO experience. Yeah, there's something going on with the ocean. There is. It's been from the very beginning.
Starting point is 01:15:13 George Knapp has interesting footage around Baja, Mexico. On the other side, you have Tampere, which seems to be a hot spot. You have the Caribbean, Bahamas. Yeah, I think all these guys are hiding out. That's exactly. Do you think there's a possibility it's, you know, the ultra-terrestrial hypothesis? So this is this idea that they are ancient remnants of like an antediluvian civilization that existed pre-Isaid or pre-Youngered dress. An antediluvium?
Starting point is 01:15:39 Yeah. And that they're more advanced. than a they're like the place of what we call Atlantis are these these beings who have co-existed co-inhabited the earth with us it could it really could very well be right and if you just look at the size of the ocean you can hide an entire civilization down there and we'll especially if they're immune to the effects of the ocean um just got to be deep yeah we'll never find them would any of the scientific principles that you looked at as far as the bubble being created around the craft and all that somehow be immune to salt water?
Starting point is 01:16:13 Like, would it be able to travel transmedium? Because that's one of the... Yeah, absolutely. It's so interesting because that's the observable... That's why bent around the craft. Yeah. I'm sure a raindrop would do. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:25 It's so fascinating. I've been involved in this whole thing since 1987. And since the 80s, or even before, let's go even all the way down to the 60s, everybody always talked about the U.S. Force. And Project Blue Book. And Project Blue Book. I mean, Bob Lazare comes out in 1989 and says they weren't crash saucers, they were intact craft. And it's the Navy that's in charge. And funny enough, 40 years later, that's what people are talking about. So, you know, when I see the new
Starting point is 01:17:06 whistleblowers come out like Eric Davis or people that we're seeing, I'm not skeptical at the fact that they were involved in something. What I find very, like, basically, very interesting is that they're all saying exactly what Bob said in 1989, but they never say Bob Lazar is possibly factual. Right, right, right. No, it's hilarious. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:31 Well, there's... Bob has nothing to do with that. But everything he said is right, though. Yeah. They said they're, like, high level. There's definitely a decades-long, multi-generational crash retrieval operation. But the one guy who says,
Starting point is 01:17:43 worked on the craft. Yeah, yeah. No, no. That makes sense. Everything is right, though. I believe, there aren't that many crashes. There just aren't that many crashes. If you had to guess how many crafts are in U.S. possession now and hangers.
Starting point is 01:17:59 Now, I don't know. I mean, nine. Nine for sure. Yeah, yeah. That's it. I mean, I can only talk about what I've seen. Do you think they have a sense of ontological treat? Like when you see all this stuff around, you know, the ability to manipulate timelines with looking glass or even just manipulate time on a local scale.
Starting point is 01:18:24 And then they're saying that they found these things at archaeological digs under the ocean. Do you have a sense that they have like a metaphysical model that's like greater than the average citizen? So it's like their origin story of humanity. Maybe. You think maybe. Yeah. I think there's a good chance of that. Is your kind of Occam's Razor explanation that these are extraterrestrials?
Starting point is 01:18:48 Do you think they're time travelers? What do you think? I think that that's all equal. I mean, there's just as much chance that they're, you know, time travelers, visitors from another dimension, us from the future, or aliens. I don't see anything pointing in any specific direction. I go with the aliens just because we've seen it so much in our movie. I think we're just trained to think that. And it's palatable.
Starting point is 01:19:17 You can see other worlds. This can go travel in another fashion and get there. There's probably life there. They probably build things. And, you know, it all makes sense. Yeah. You know, but when you go to other dimensions in time, well, can you even time travel at all? I mean, will that ever be possible?
Starting point is 01:19:36 You know, maybe, maybe not. How do you get here from another dimension? Why would you care? Why would you go to another dimension and start asking? people over there, you know? So, I mean, the other things don't make sense. So, yeah, I lean, I guess the Occam's Razor is aliens. Um, but it could be any one of the other possibilities. Or one that we haven't thought of. That's just completely ridiculous. What do you think was the top speed? I was just conventionally moving. Yep. I don't think it really had a very high top speed.
Starting point is 01:20:11 Really? Yeah. Hmm. Like if you had to. It depends. I mean, It depends on how it was being, because you can maneuver it in a couple different ways. So, of course, how would I know? I mean, the speed it could attain. But I'm just thinking about an Omicron mode where it's just sitting there and moving, but you think about...
Starting point is 01:20:37 Delta. Yeah, and at Delta, the speed's going to be near infinite. It's going to appear somewhere else. You think almost close to the speed of light or it would look like it's hopping across space time or something? No, it would far exceed the speed of light. It'd be faster. Yeah, because you're not going in a linear fashion. You're just jumping over.
Starting point is 01:20:57 Wow. Because it's bending, it's warping space time itself. Yeah, yeah. So it's, you know, for a given distance, you'll get, you know, to the destination far faster than you would if you were driving at the speed of light. And it's like crunching space time behind it and then in front of it. It's like riding a wave or something. It's just bending space around it. Did you hear anything around pulses involved in the compulsion?
Starting point is 01:21:23 Yeah, yeah. It's not a continuous. It's like it pulses. I don't know what the maximum range of each jump is, but I know it's like a 10 millisecond recycle time in between it. So the craft is always doing this. When all three of the amplifiers are being used for travel, they're in the Delta configuration.
Starting point is 01:21:45 And when only one is being used for travel, it's in the Omicron configuration. You guys do an amazing job of depicting the configurations. So what is Delta exactly? Delta is using the three, there's three amplifiers, Delta. Yes. And that's where they all focus together on a destination.
Starting point is 01:22:03 Okay. The craft puts its belly in that direction, and that's how it moves. Okay. The Omicron is where it only uses one. Yeah. you know, are the emitters to propel itself, or it's not really propelling itself,
Starting point is 01:22:19 as doing the opposite. Essentially create an indentation in space time, so the craft moves forward, which always gives it, if it's operating in Omer Kron configuration, it's never really stable. It's kind of a, you know, somewhat undulating movement, you know.
Starting point is 01:22:41 It's so interesting. And, yeah, it's fascinating. That seems to be a common thing. The craft's sort of wobble. Yeah, this wobble. Yeah. But when it switches to Delta, as soon as the two other amplifiers come on online, that thing locks in space and time.
Starting point is 01:23:00 And then it's, you know, able to focus in any direction and move there instantaneously. Logan. Oh, all right. What's up? That's good. You're in our mid-century living room set. You have Luigi, Venditelli, Bob Lazar, and Logan is a long-time UFO nut.
Starting point is 01:23:31 Okay. And you watch WWE at all? No. He is the guy in WWE right now. He has an amazing podcast as well. I've known his brother, actually, for like a decade plus. Dude, I got to say, Bob, it is an honor to meet you, man. Absolute legend.
Starting point is 01:23:46 What a privilege to talk to you. Oh, thanks. Good, good to me too. I don't know if Jesse gave you any context to why I wanted to talk to you. They have a bit, yeah, but maybe we rehash it. Okay, okay. So, Bob, check this out. Okay.
Starting point is 01:24:02 I have in my possession, UFO footage that has a story behind it that is compelling but not convincing. And I've been waiting to just do something with his footage or receive confirmation of sorts. and I see this particular orange disc sometimes in UFO videos and documentaries. It pops up every now and then. But when I was watching the trailer for S4 that you guys released, about 80% of the way through the trailer,
Starting point is 01:24:35 you guys show a disc that is at night but then kind of coats itself in this orange. Right. Yeah. That's right. Yeah. Dude, I paused it there. And I said, oh my God, that looks exactly like the footage that I have. So this footage, supposedly authentic, was taken by two college kids who wanted to go to Area 51 in the 90s, I believe it was in 1995, and filmed their experience of trying to see if they could stumble upon a UFO or just alien activity of sorts.
Starting point is 01:25:15 Let's break this down. A couple of college-age guys drove out to the black mailbox, an infamous landmark entrance point to Area 51. It's along the road that leads to Groom Lake, extremely close to where Bob said he worked. It's nighttime. They're parked right in front of the fence surrounding the secret facility. The lights are off on their car,
Starting point is 01:25:41 and they have a camera resting on the armrest pointed through the front windshield. And then it cuts to, Under the dashboard and you see something very clearly illuminating like the top of the dashboard and they're like hunkered underneath the car and they're whispering to each other like, I think it's out there. Like I don't know what it is. Maybe we should go out there. And they're like kind of scared. Then something appears just beyond the glass. The craft is hovering extremely close to the car.
Starting point is 01:26:24 It's orange and slightly wobbling or undulating in place as if it's on a wave. You can hear the two guys whispering. Yeah, that to me is exactly how it was described by Bob. It's exactly like your hand did. Your hand at this. It's moving the right way. It's the right color and it's the right shape. So it makes it very compelling.
Starting point is 01:27:17 The intensity of the light, there's something very, very bright that is affecting that. The dash is being lit. It's the dash of the vehicle and the craft is above it. Right. And look at the intent. Here's the dash. And look at the intensity of the light that's going to happen here. Right.
Starting point is 01:27:34 Whoa. There. Those are really. Yeah. And it's fading in. Yeah, you can't fake that. You can see that it wobbles. But it wobbles.
Starting point is 01:27:45 It wobbles. That's the important thing. Yeah. So it does comport with your video. It wobbles. It glows like that in that color, in that shape. That's wild, dude. Yeah, I mean it.
Starting point is 01:27:56 It's wild. It's impressive. It is. The craft emits an orange-reddish color, which is not a coincidence. A craft with strong field interactions, like the ones that Bob alludes to, creates an ionized plasma sheath around itself. The dominant atmospheric gas on Earth is nitrogen. Ionized nitrogen that interacts with plasma glows red-orange. This classic observation of a glowing reddish or orange ball of light,
Starting point is 01:28:30 moving silently and erratically is one of the most commonly reported UFO descriptions across decades of sightings worldwide. No, what? Did you see that move? It did. No, I didn't. Logan has been sitting on this footage for almost a decade now, and I'll spare you the crazy details as to how he obtained it. But he's obsessed with UFOs and thinks this video should be out for the benefit of the public. Now I know this footage is grainy. And while certainly fascinating, it's far from conclusive, but it is another fascinating data point. What Luigi's movie almost definitively vindicates is the existence of S4. Remember,
Starting point is 01:29:23 when Bob went public in 1989, Area 51 itself hadn't even been officially acknowledged by the government. And to this day, S4's existence is still denied. It's not supposed to exist, But Luigi used Google Earth's historical imagery to go back in time and found a 2022 version of the area surrounding S4 that was not yet blurred to obscure the site. And yet, vehicle tracks are visible in these older satellite images. You can clearly see the tracks. Look at them going in every direction.
Starting point is 01:29:58 And you look at all the traffic. Yeah, right? Yeah, that's not one guy driving around. No, that's not one guy driving. Exactly. Exactly. Again, there's no public out there. So what are you doing?
Starting point is 01:30:09 Luigi also shows Bob a high-quality aerial photograph taken by a pilot, roughly 17 miles from Papus Lake. The image had previously circulated online, but Luigi enhanced the contrast a bit to reveal additional details. And if you look carefully in this version here where the contrast has been changed, as we zoom, look what you see. You can start seeing the... You see them clearly right there. Yeah, the slanted rectangular doors, yeah. Finally, and perhaps most damningly, the map of Papus Lake was literally altered eight days after Bob Lazar went public in his first anonymous video.
Starting point is 01:30:54 You heard me right. They changed the map eight days after Bob started to speak out, and the map was clearly modified in a way that would specifically hide the existence of S4. Bob went public on May 15th, 1989. And he didn't come public. His name was in public. It was him as Dennis in silhouette. And eight days after that, the United States Department of the Interior, who works on the geological maps of the landscape at the test site where it's Groom Lake, Papus Lake, and the whole Nevada test site.
Starting point is 01:31:35 actually modified all the maps there, specifically Groom Lake and Papus Lake and Papus Mountain Range there. And there's a stamp on all the modifications, because the modification was dated 1989. So on the actual small print, it says maps modified 1989. But the stamp of the exact day is May 23rd. 1989, exactly
Starting point is 01:32:08 eight days after Bob went public. And specifically, they are getting... Just Papoose Lake. Just Papus Lake, so they're removing S-4. No, what they remove... The specificity there is the specific thing they removed is there's a road
Starting point is 01:32:25 that leads from Groom Lake down to Papus Lake. And as it leads down to Papus Lake, the north end of the lake, the road forks off. It splits out. It splits. off in two areas to the west of Papus Lake and to the right of Papus Lake, where S4 is. They specifically removed the road to the east of Papus Lake, and they kept the same one to the west, which, why would they do that?
Starting point is 01:32:53 Why would you suddenly remove the road that goes to S4? And leave everything else there. That was an amazing discovery. Yeah, and it's there. I mean, it's not like, we're not making anything up here. I was very specific of like, I don't want to put anything that makes us look like we're inventing stuff. This is verifiable. You could order these maps.
Starting point is 01:33:17 The other thing I think that's interesting is for people doubting the story. Jeremy Corbell and Ross Colthart found a bunch of people who have verified Bob's presence at S4. Right? I don't know if you have as well. I think arriving at 51 or getting on the bus or something. That's right. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:33:38 And then they found a bunch of people. George Knapp also had some people and they got threatened back then and they were told six people that were threatened. And basically they never made it for. George talks about it in the interviews we did with him and he's talked about it in the past. And he says they all received the phone call. They were all threatened and they never went public. And, and, you know. for anybody who's a Bob Lazard detractor or doesn't believe the story,
Starting point is 01:34:08 you then have to not believe George Knapp. Because why would George lie about that? What's the benefit here? You know? And somebody's going to say, well, it's because he put his name attached to the Bob story. No, not when that was happening. He was still investigating the Bob story. So he said that back then.
Starting point is 01:34:28 It's not like it's new information. Well, he was getting a lot of shit. Yeah, he was getting a lot of shit. story back then. It was not, certainly not a feather, just sticking his cap. You know, it's, it's something I, I really want to put a lot of emphasis on because of all the haters out there is this happened when he came out. It was in 1989. It was a different era. It was a different time in the world. Oh, yeah. Yeah. So, you know, the people now that think that Bob Lazar is a grifter or what, I'm a grifter, because I'm making a movie about this,
Starting point is 01:35:03 and whatever. You know, this happened 40 years ago. I was interested in UFOs 40 years ago, and believe me, I was not popular. This was the most unpopular topic when it came out. It was considered to be so don't touch that because it's going to ruin your life. So why would, first of all, why would Bob Lazar do that? And then why would George Knapp a respected investigative journalist in Las Vegas who already was well known and had a good job, why would he hang his reputation and ruin his entire career just to support another liar? Like, it doesn't make any sense to me. No. It really doesn't. So, you know, let's not forget those. Yeah, and he has multiple P bodies. He's well respected exactly, as you said, outside of UFOs. Yeah. Yeah. Did you learn any other
Starting point is 01:36:02 details about the guy that it died that you were replacing? Yeah, they had an operating reactor. So apparently, which also brings up all kinds of other questions to me, apparently the reactors and all the craft are exactly the same. So that makes me think of a manufacturing facility. Yeah. That's like a Ford making an engine and it goes in, you know, a bunch of different models. How can all these crafts have the same, you know,
Starting point is 01:36:32 the same power system or propulsion system in him. Anyway, I don't want to go off on a tangent, but he had a reactor, so it was probably from one of the other crafts. And why they did this is beyond me, they took it out to the nuclear test site, and they physically cut into it while it was running under load. And it exploded. And I think there were three guys there, maybe more.
Starting point is 01:37:02 were all killed. So number one, why would you do that? Number two, it makes me think either they were extremely desperate and want to just, well, find out what's in there and, you know, and why would you even do it while it was operating or extremely confident that they knew what was going on in the reactor, where they could safely cut it, and they had a reason to get in there. But apparently that information never made it back, whatever they gleaned from it, or even their suspicions at the beginning, because Barry and I were kind of starting from the beginning on the reactor.
Starting point is 01:37:47 So everything they had done previously was lost. Anyway. You ever learn the guy's name or any details about it? Does Barry have a last name? Yeah, Barry Castillo. It's spelled Castileo, but Castile, I don't know how it's pronounced, yeah. Have you ever tracked him down after all this? I think briefly decades ago, we made a reel.
Starting point is 01:38:15 Because there was another guy that would come in and out once in a while named Renee. Okay. I don't remember his last name. But, I mean, at some point, I really put a lot of effort into trying to find Dennis, Mariani and Barry. And I think some people did track down Dennis. I think he died not too long ago. Okay.
Starting point is 01:38:36 I don't know about Barry, but I never was never able to find it. Because, I mean, back in the time I was looking for him, there was no internet, you know, so you had to go through public records and stuff. Yeah. It was much more difficult than it is now. Yeah. And I know of one instance in which the name Dennis Mariani was corroborated by somebody at, you know, Nevada test site. And so, you know, I won't go further than that, but because it's not right.
Starting point is 01:39:05 It's not my thing to tell. But you're giving names and, you know, I think some of these people could still be alive, which is pretty remarkable to you. Like maybe we could track some of them down and they could back you up. I wonder, I mean, they have to know. I'm kind of wondering why nobody else came out, you know. Yeah. I mean, although Barry wouldn't talk about.
Starting point is 01:39:29 about it much, you know. There are times I kind of mentioned, you know, holy cow, can you believe this is being kept secret? And he goes, it sucks, I know. So he didn't think it was, you know, he wasn't with the program as far as keeping this from, you know, the entire world. What was his background? No idea.
Starting point is 01:39:51 Okay. No idea. But there was kind of a collegial goodwill between you and him. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And he'd goof around sometimes, which was nice because everything else was just so rigid and military. So, you know, I'm sure heard the story where he threw the golf ball at the reactor.
Starting point is 01:40:10 And, you know, sometimes we'd just start talking about stupid stuff. So it was good to see a normal person, you know, that just acted like, you know, a human instead of a robot. What happened when he threw the golf ball at the reactor? He was showing me the field on it. And he said, check this out and took a golf ball and, you know, intending to hit the reactor. And instead it bounced off the field and then hit a ceiling tile, which dislodged it and made all the little particles, you know, come down. And we knew Dennis was going to be coming back in two minutes. So it was, you know, red alert.
Starting point is 01:40:48 We had to, you know, grab the stools and go up and reassent it and clean it up and everything. And, you know, shortly after that, Dennis walks in what's going on. Nothing, nothing. We're working like we should be. I mean, this is a remarkable detail around the reactor. You have this sort of force field-like thing, this like repelling force. Yeah, yeah. Once the hemisphere on top of a plate, you know, about the size of a basketball,
Starting point is 01:41:17 maybe a little bigger on top of a 15-inch square plate, the hemisphere is removable. Once the hemisphere is put back on, If the emitter is in the right position, the reactor will turn on immediately, and it'll produce a gravitational field around it, and you can push on it, and you can't touch the reactor from that point. I mean, and it's somewhat elastic, you know, like if you have two like poles of a magnet, pushing them together, you get that.
Starting point is 01:41:50 It's the exact same feel, but without metal, it's just your hands. But as I said before, what's really important, interesting is, you know, you can move the reactor on the table. And once you turn it on and you're pushing on the field, the reactor doesn't slide. So it's not transferring the force to the reactor. It's pushing your hand away. But so that's, it's really interesting to me. How did the reactor work?
Starting point is 01:42:24 This is all guess. This is just all guesswork. Yes. It has a super heavy element in it, which appeared to be 115 on the periodic chart. There's a little tower in it. And from X-rays, we could see that there's a loop around the base plate. So it was theorized, apparently Barry with his other lab partner. They thought that was a cyclotron, an accelerator, and that the tube that came
Starting point is 01:42:57 up the side was an off-ramp, essentially. And that particle, or whatever was being accelerated, interacts with the 115, and somehow that produces the gravitational field. How did it feel on your hand? It felt exactly like pushing magnets together. Okay. It was just elastic. I mean, it was compressible to some degree,
Starting point is 01:43:23 and then when it got close to it, nothing is getting past that. With magnets, you have to have like pulls, for them to repel. Yeah. And in this case, you're not, you know. It's just matter repelling matter. Yeah, it's so weird. Does it feel like a, what does it feel like?
Starting point is 01:43:43 Does it, is there a texture to it? No, it's just, it's just elastic, but it becomes, it's not linear. But does it feel like, it says it's logarithmic, you know, it's easy to push and then it becomes impossible. There's no way you're getting past the next three and, is you could probably sit a car on top of it and nothing would change. Does it feel like saran wrap or does it feel like, like what does it feel like when you're in it? Does it feel like?
Starting point is 01:44:13 No, it just feels. It's literally like air, like. Yeah, I see what you're saying. You know what I mean? I describe that. Yeah. Like is there a coolness, a heat? No.
Starting point is 01:44:27 It's just like space time itself. Yeah, it's just, I don't know how to describe it. Sure, sure. But it's just there. I mean, at this point, I don't even think it's gravity. What do you think? I think this is another completely unique force. It doesn't behave enough like gravity.
Starting point is 01:44:54 And explain why it's so different. I mean, because at least my thoughts at this point are, I think gravity is just a property and matter, and it's only an attractive force. I'm not sure you can have anti-gravity. Like if it was gravity, at one point Barry showed me, he had one of the emitters at working.
Starting point is 01:45:18 He put a lit little kitchen candle right at the focal point, and he powered up the reactor, and the flame stopped flickering. It stood there frozen in space and time. But I could see the light from the, candle. The flame was still visible. Also, he removed the candle and then rotated the emitter. I don't know if it was another direction or more the same way, but it made a little black ball in the air where no light was
Starting point is 01:45:49 escaping, looking like a little black hole. But no, you could just tell there was no light at the focal point right in the air. It was just a dark area. So there it's affecting light, but it wasn't in the candle test before that. So it's a really unusual, unusual thing. When Bob mentioned this anomalous force coming from the craft's emitter, I immediately racked my brain for anyone in conventional aerospace circles who talks about something similar. And then I realized I just interviewed the lead electrostatic scientist at NASA, Dr. Charles Bueller, who talks about something very similar. Okay, where the heck is this energy coming from? Because if I was to stick this
Starting point is 01:46:37 in space, it would accelerate with the power off. That's a problem. You see, there's a long lineage of people studying gravity control or anti-gravity in the United States. Perhaps my favorite example is mid-century inventor Thomas Townsend Brown, who discovered that when you apply a high voltage to certain asymmetric capacitors, they produce thrust. That's right, propulsion with no fuel, no exhaust, no propellant, just a high voltage. Just electricity as the input converted directly into motion, a new model for space propulsion
Starting point is 01:47:16 that could eliminate crude chemical combustion rockets forever. Now you might think that's insane and defies Newton's laws. And I'll spare you all of the corroborating research that I've dug up showing that Brown made real breakthroughs in the world of anti-gravity. Dr. Charles Bueller at NASA has taken Brown's experiments to the next level, with modern instruments, more rigorous controls. What do we see about 0.1 grams that corresponds to about 1 milanuton of thrust? And decades of electrostatics expertise from his work at Kennedy Space Center behind him.
Starting point is 01:47:51 He's done over 2,000 of these experiments and controlled for just about every variable you can think of. And he's also getting millinutons of thrust, basically real propulsion with electricity as the sole input. And you can't really argue with his authority to make these claims. the man literally runs electrostatics at NASA. He's the incoming president of the American Electrostatic Society. And he's contributed two fundamental principles to the field of electrostatics that are now widely accepted. So this is kind of an interesting moment in history because we have a man who reverse engineered UFOs. And then we have a NASA lead electrostatic scientist.
Starting point is 01:48:33 So I thought I'd just leave it to you guys to kind of nerd out. Yeah, well, first of all, hi, Charles. Hi, Bob. This is a very exciting moment for me. I'm a big fan. Now, the thing about Bob Lazar is he kind of exists on an island. We've never seen him interact with other highly credentialed engineers in aerospace. And what I've learned after spending time with him is he's actually pretty skeptical when it comes to other scientific anomalies.
Starting point is 01:49:00 Man, I'm real interested to hear, you know, your physical experiment set up. Is it a hybrid of your idea in T.T. Browns or are you just duplicating one of his experiments? I mean, what can you explain to me what it looks like? What's your test setup look like? Gosh, 2,000 variations. I'll try to do my best. I mean, how is this? I'm sure you've seen the lifter ion motors and stuff along those lines. How is it different from those? few ways. The ion thrusters obviously use ions in air to give the momentum observation. What's interesting about this force, even though it's sort of the same geometry can be used, but in high vacuum, you'll get the thrust. But it's always in the opposite direction of the ion thrust, which is really cool. Because what happens is you have a sharp electrode in the ground plane. However, you do that, you can come up with a million ways to do that. In air, when you do that, you'll break down the gases.
Starting point is 01:50:05 either Corona or some fold like that. In vacuum, we can actually see these forces arise, but they're always in the opposite direction of the ion wind, which is really interesting. That is very interesting. It's the same direction as the rocket exhaust. You never think of that. So it really messes with you.
Starting point is 01:50:23 So that's what's interesting about it. That's one main difference. Wow. Yeah, well, that's really interesting. I mean, the fact that it's in the opposite direction of an ion, where an ion thruster would be. and you've done it in a hard or reasonably hard vacuum and you're getting measurable thrust?
Starting point is 01:50:40 Oh, we have. We've been doing that since 2020. So the last six years, we test almost every day, probably every other day, different configurations or zero in on a configuration, test another concept, and that is an ongoing iterative process.
Starting point is 01:50:57 So, yes, we have tested a high vacuum, 10 to minus six or better. The champion can get up 10 of minus seven, but enough to prove to us that there's no eye on wind. What kind of thrust in Newtons or grams are you getting? Well, we're still playing around in the hundreds of microtons or milanutein ranges. So I think the highest we've gotten is probably up to the 50-millimeter mark.
Starting point is 01:51:18 But that's when we stack these together. We don't learn a lot from them when we do that other than we can make more thrust, which is important. But we like to understand the thrust density, if you will, of each thruster. So we're trying to optimize each type, optimize each. parameter space that we could have access to before we can get to larger chambers or outer space to test the megastructures. Physically, how big are these thrusters? Oh, they're not very big.
Starting point is 01:51:46 They're about six inches, maybe six by six roughly. Okay. It's a nice size. You know, we can make them bigger, but we don't gain anything by that. We just try to keep them manageable so that we can, you know, do different things with them, you know, stack them, try different voltages. is, and then we try to measure the currents. We make sure that in many cases there is no current, which is very odd.
Starting point is 01:52:10 Yeah, I would say. Isn't that interesting? Yeah, I'd say. Turn the power source off and it keeps going. Wait, what? Yeah, it is very annoying that in some cases we trap the charge in there, that's all that's required. So that really eliminates a lot of things.
Starting point is 01:52:27 So a physically larger one doesn't get you any more thrust, but you can stack them and get increased thrust. Well, the first is a large one will, but we won't learn anything from it. You know, we can do eight inches or ten inches, which we have, but we're not learning anything from. We want to learn, you know,
Starting point is 01:52:44 what is the best geometry shape. We want to optimize it. We know area is one of the ways. That will be optimized later, once we're in space. But on ground test articles, we're kind of fixed by the geometry of our chamber. Once we get some funding here,
Starting point is 01:52:58 we do, Drew does have almost a walk-in-sized chamber. in its garage. You can walk in it. When that comes online in a few months, then we can test much larger versions of it. So the thrust does depend on the area. It does depend on the volume. It does depend on the voltages, the typical things you would expect. But you could try to optimize it as much as we can with the chamber that we have
Starting point is 01:53:23 actively running right now. How much are you charging them up to? What kind of voltage are you using? Well, when we started in 2016, it was at the Townsend Brown level, 150,000 volts. Okay, okay. Thank goodness we're not anywhere near that now. I think we're operating right now about 400 volts. You're at 400 volts? Yeah, so his belief is that it's really Brown thought that the voltage range was, you know, the thing causing the thrust.
Starting point is 01:53:56 But Charles's belief is that that's sort of a proxy for electric field string. and there are obviously other ways to amplify electric field strength that lower voltages. And so he's using 400 volts. Yeah, but I can't. It's shocking. 1.5 millonitons. That's unbelievable. Man, I want to come over and hang out with you.
Starting point is 01:54:18 I can introduce you guys. Put your hands on it, do whatever you like. You're more than well. Isn't that exciting? Yeah. I can't believe you're getting these results and I can't get past the 400 volts either. If you increase the voltage, you don't see any change in thrust. Oh, you'll get more thrust, for sure.
Starting point is 01:54:36 We'd like to stay, you know, 200 volts, 500 volts. We'd like to stay low if we can't. Okay. Yeah. It's a preference. I mean, we all average, we'll test up to 2, 2500 volts. We can start worrying about breakdown when you get more about that. Because these systems are getting much, much smaller.
Starting point is 01:54:54 So we don't have access to the higher fields anymore. It's material properties that we have to do. But we like the 2,300 volts. It gets rid of other nuances like Corona wind or anything like that. Right, right, yeah. All that stuff gets tossed out. Yeah, you're not even ionizing the air in air at 400 volts. I mean, it's nothing.
Starting point is 01:55:17 That's why I was so shocked because all those other effects drop out right as soon as you drop the voltage down that low. And you can get some cleaner data then. That's, damn, this is really cool. converting Bob on Townsend Brown. Well, yeah, thank you for this. Really appreciate it, man. Good to meet you. Good to meet you, too.
Starting point is 01:55:40 Take care, guys. Take care. That's really fascinating. Isn't that wild? Yeah, it's a little more than just wild. I know, right? Yeah, it is. I mean, that's significant.
Starting point is 01:55:53 I think so. It could really be significant. You know, the thing is, the first thing I would point out, there's something wrong with your tests, but not in 1,500 tests. No. You know, when you've gone through it that many times and have done it for this long, boy, and you've adjusted all the, you know, potential parameters and fallouts to, uh, no, I can't.
Starting point is 01:56:19 I know. Yeah, I, you got to assume there's, that the thing's working. But you also, you mentioned DC voltage in the craft. And that was, yeah, that's also a towns and brown that is high, Yeah, it's not just high DC voltage. I even mentioned it on, you know, Joe Rogan that I think the material the craft is made from is an electric. And so it always, just like a magnet always has a magnetic field to it. And electric always has an electrostatic field to it.
Starting point is 01:56:50 Interesting. And I think I think that's certainly something important. Were there high climb rates to the voltage likely? You know what I mean? like really high climb, like fast, you know, swinging up in voltage. Oh, yeah, I'm without a doubt. It's so fascinating because it's literally all the towns and brown stuff. It's like fast, high DC voltage, like fast climb rates, yeah.
Starting point is 01:57:14 You know, well, I wonder if that really applies to the craft more than I was given it credit for. I think it does, especially after your conversation with Beuling. Yeah, yeah. I mean, now that's making me wonder. It could very well be, again, because of the high voltage on the craft. And it's DC. Yeah, so there's no magnetic field interference. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 01:57:31 Man, that's... We're making progress. Yeah. He might have been so far past this already, but... Well, the funny thing about Brown is he was looking for a power source that was nuclear for, like, the rest of his career. Oh, yeah. You figure out the electric givetics and then he called it the flame jet jet. Boy, that would have been the guy to have there other than me.
Starting point is 01:57:52 Well, I mean, you and him. I'd just go walk off set. No, you and him would be it. I'd just get in the way. But, yeah, he'd be the guy to have there. And you were given some theories like there being two gravities, gravity A and gravity B. Was that in the briefing documents or was this told to you? Actually, I think that was part of what Barry.
Starting point is 01:58:17 Barry had other lab notes. And I don't know if those were previous documents that he had, but there were lab notes. and this was the direction they were going in at one time. There are two specific different types of gravity, gravity A and gravity B. Gravity A works on a smaller micro scale, while gravity B works on a larger macro scale. Gravity A is what is currently being labeled as the strong nuclear force in mainstream physics, and gravity A is the wave that you need to access and amplify to enable you to cause space time distortion for interstellar travel.
Starting point is 01:59:00 Gravity B is like cosmological scale and gravity A is like subatomic scale. Apparently. Apparently, which it is really interesting because I remember you're like kind of OG science tutorial. We were texting about it last night. Yeah, the excerpts from the government Bible, the original tape that you did. And it's amazing. So it sounds like the kind of gravity A is like basically the perimeter of the atom or the, what you're dealing with.
Starting point is 01:59:32 But again, I'm just repeating stuff that I was told. It's not like I conducted an experiment to verify that. But it is almost the solution to what has been keeping physics stuck for so long. Yeah, possibly. Quantized gravity. Right, right. Possibly. That's so interesting.
Starting point is 01:59:50 If in fact that's gravity. Have you ever, you know, when you're talking about this, but gravity-like fields, and I want to give this to you because you can make sense of it more than me. and we were talking about this last time. This is this guy, Berkhardheim. Have you ever heard that name? I've heard the name, but I don't know anything about him. So he, at the age of 19, became deaf and blind due to an explosion.
Starting point is 02:00:15 And he was a German, and he ended up moving over to the U.S. and working for Lockheed Martin in the 50s and was renowned as just a total genius. And he had a really interesting theory of gravity, which involved, I guess, two gravitational fields and like some of these like sub-components of gravity i wrote this down because it's honestly beyond my pay grade gravity breaks down big and small scale so it could be gravity a and gravity b specifically standard gravity g is the tensor summation of three gravitational components g g g which g a big g little g which is scalar gravity propagated by the graviton g by the graviton so he's going with gravitons for that.
Starting point is 02:00:58 Okay. GGP, dark energy slash matter propagated by the gravito photon and GQ vacuum field, a repulsive force propagated by the quintessence particle. So in addition to the standard four forces, gravity electromagnetism, strong nuclear and weak nuclear, E.HT, which is extended Heim theory, which is named after him, adds two previously unrecognized gravitational forces, which brings us to six fundamental forces. Wow. And what I find interesting about that is there's
Starting point is 02:01:29 Amy Eskridge is this anti-gravity researcher who actually died under very mysterious circumstances, and she apparently was at the end of her life kept talking about a sixth force. That was like... A sixth force, really? Sixth force, yeah. The sixth force is anti-gravity.
Starting point is 02:01:44 That's what my group has a mathematical equation to physically describe. We have six-force on lockdown. And so I wonder about, you know, this book and there's these two guys in Germany, who are a very high conviction in this extended hymn. I like to read it. Well, it's yours.
Starting point is 02:02:01 Thanks. Oh, that's really interesting. Isn't it interesting? I'm also on that. I think it was not gravity. I don't think it's gravity. Yeah, it's something else. Something else going out.
Starting point is 02:02:19 Yeah. Because if it were, right, if it were gravity well that you'd normally see, it's a little black hole, a little gravitational source. You'd just see everything getting sucked into it, no matter what. Other things would have acted differently, too. Yeah, light lensing and, yeah. Yeah, so it's, it almost feels like, it almost has to be. It almost has to be.
Starting point is 02:02:43 It's almost like it had root access to reality itself. Like it froze time. Yeah, but if it froze time, how come the photons were still coming out of it? You see a glowing candle. it should be dark. Can it freeze time in some local space? But still, confine it.
Starting point is 02:03:04 Still, the photons are flying out. Maybe, and if you say, well, it doesn't affect photons, how come it made the black little ball? So what do you, so have you, where do you think? Do you have a best candidate for what it is? No. Hmm. There is.
Starting point is 02:03:21 No, that's why I think, I mean, I lean towards this is, this is another force and just stop calling it gravity. But you think it's what's... As Barry said, the only thing we know that does this is gravity. So we're calling it a gravity generator. Okay. And then it's being created ostensibly due to this proton bombardment of element 115 and then you get 116 and then you get a decay and then... If in fact all that's occurring.
Starting point is 02:03:54 Yes. It's so interesting. I mean, don't forget that in the film, we did not include the mechanical watch experiment that was also conducted in the lab. So there was the candle, the black ball, and the mechanical watch. We didn't put it in there just because we wanted to shorten the film. But there was another experiment, Bob, remember? And there was like a mechanical watch that just stopped. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:04:18 Yeah. I mean, that's another indicator where Bob said. Just like that, I mean, it's kind of similar to the candle. It just stopped. Mm. But I could still see it. Yeah. Hmm.
Starting point is 02:04:31 It's like it's freezing. It's time. It's freezing movement. Freezing movement. But not affecting anything else. There's nothing that just freezes a move. No, it doesn't. But that is really, time is so weird.
Starting point is 02:04:43 Because we only. Something that inhibits kinetic energy. Right. Which would be, that would be really weird. Well, it's so weird, especially given all of the forms of possible kinetic energy. You're talking about a watch, a mechanical watch, and a flame are very different things. Yeah. So, that's so strange. While you were there, did you tell anybody what you were working on, you know, your wife at the time? No, Gene Huff. You told Gene Huff. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:05:12 Okay. I told John Lear, too. Yeah. And you even brought them to see the test. Yeah, to see the test. Yeah, because I had the test flight schedule. Yep. So I know it's on Wednesday night. Nate, yeah, we're going out there, and you guys are going to see it. This is John Lear, and today is March 22nd, 1989. We're standing just about eight miles, due east of Grum Lake, Nevada, the super government secret test site. And just a few minutes ago, we saw one of the government extraterrestrial UFOs fly over there. We all watched it for about seven or eight minutes. Right here, I have my celestial scopes, it's eight inches.
Starting point is 02:05:51 and I had it focused in for about 15 seconds and saw for myself that in fact it was a disc. There isn't much to see with the camera back at that day. And that was while you were working at S4. You showed them, or was it afterwards? That was, boy, that's a tough question. That was while I was working there. Okay.
Starting point is 02:06:16 Yeah. When you saw the UFO with Gene Huff and John Lear, And you kind of, you know, took them, what was it, to the little mesa? Was it a mesa? No. It was right outside. It was, uh, yeah. Before, you know, before you get to the black mailbox.
Starting point is 02:06:35 You know, the reason anybody knew about the black mailbox, everybody wanted to know where the road was that we turned down. When you come up the highway, it's this first dirt road you go down. But there's no landmarks around there. And if you keep going like another mile or two, There's a black mailbox. So I just said, it's around the black mailbox. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:06:57 And that just got repeated. And everybody thought, that's a black mailbox. The black mailbox wrote is where it is. It's not anywhere near where it is. When all you guys went up there and you saw the UFO fly and I'm sure they were just totally shocked, were you allowed back at S4 after that? Yeah, well, yeah, the first time they didn't know we were out there. Oh, they didn't know.
Starting point is 02:07:19 Yeah, yeah. We only got caught the last time. Okay. So they get and then I would never have let me back. So after the last time you weren't let back there. Right. That was it. That was absolutely it.
Starting point is 02:07:31 You were finished after that. No, they're not going to come on back. Yeah, no. Yeah, yeah, yeah. They were pretty pissed. Yeah. Why did you decide to come out and approach? I don't know because like I was still getting followed.
Starting point is 02:07:46 There was always somebody parked outside my house and I was starting to get scared. And I think that's when I first started telling Gene. I said, you know, hey, if all of a sudden I disappear, you know, I'm working out at the site there. And eventually I told him, he said, why are you working on secret weapons or something? I said, no, I'm working on this and, you know, kind of told him. But I don't know, I'm just getting concerned about what's going on. Why do you think they were following you? I don't know.
Starting point is 02:08:17 It might just be normal security. Did you take anything from the lab? Well, not at that time. Okay. Okay, later. But that's interesting that they were, we'll file that away, but it's interesting that they were following you as if you had done something wrong when you were just showing up to work.
Starting point is 02:08:39 No, but, I mean, you know, they were still doing, they allowed me in there and they were still progressing on my clearance. They were still going through background checks, but they really wanted me on-site operating quickly. And they kind of let that slide because I've had clearance before. So, you know, but, yeah, they were looking at some other things, too. Got it. That concerned them.
Starting point is 02:09:06 About you personally. About my relationship. Okay. Got it. And so then they were digging into that? That's kind of. Yeah, you know, you have to have a stable family background if you're going to be, you know, playing around. it's state secrets and stuff like that.
Starting point is 02:09:22 Sure. They don't want you being crazy. They don't want you drinking. They're going to be checking out, you know, how you play with friends. If you were going to rages, I want to make sure, you know, your wife was running around. And they don't want any stress or any, anything to. But then at that point, if you see these, like, you know, black cars parked outside of your house, why isn't your reaction?
Starting point is 02:09:44 Okay. I'm just going to kind of eat it. Like, they're going to, like, you know, give me, like, a colonoscopy as far as, like, you know, literally like knowing 360 everything about my life but I'll be able to retain my job at S4 or do you just you get scared and you're like I gotta I gotta come out or what's your... I don't really remember how I felt back then
Starting point is 02:10:04 but I was just getting a little concern. Yeah and did you... I said they couldn't hurt to at least tell one person you know so did you want because John Lear gave the files on you to George Knapp, right? A KLAS. Is that how it went down?
Starting point is 02:10:25 Gave the files on me. Or gave the, like, said like, you know, hey. Yeah, I mean, John Lear is the one that contacted George Knapp and said you should speak to this guy. Okay. So he played kind of intermediary. Was he going rogue on his own? Or did you say, hey, can you contact, you know,
Starting point is 02:10:46 George or somebody in the local news to help me get this stuff out? No, I mean, at that, well, things were starting to get weird. And I don't really remember how that went down. But I think, you know, George said, look, you got to get the information out publicly because that's the only way, that's the only thing that'll protect yourself. I said, that's really stupid. I'm not going to do that. And, you know, it was just a couple days later on, well, maybe it's not that stupid.
Starting point is 02:11:20 And was it, do you think? think it was self-protection or idealism, where it was a part of you like, this needs to be out. This is crazy. Oh, yeah, of course it was. Yeah, yeah. But it was an equal part of self-protection.
Starting point is 02:11:34 Yeah, no, fair enough. Lear is somebody, I think a lot of people have questions about because he was. He had crazy beliefs. Crazy beliefs. You know, I mean, some of the stuff was so ridiculous. You know, I would sit there and just talk to him and go, you are absolutely out of your mind if you believe it. I mean, I didn't believe the sun was hot.
Starting point is 02:11:55 Yeah. They said there were people living in the sun. So there's no one living in the sun, John. And said, yeah, they built the moon on Jupiter. And that's where they manufactured it and they towed it into Earths are. But what is given you these ridiculous, why are you believing this nonsense? Yeah. And how'd you meet him?
Starting point is 02:12:19 Gene Huff. was a real estate appraiser. And at the time, John was looking to get a loan on his house. And he had been on, George Knapp had a show on the record, like after the news. And John Lear had been on there back when he wasn't so, well, I wasn't going to say he wasn't so crazy, but didn't have such crazy ideas. You know, I mean, he was, look, he was an accomplished, pilot, a brilliant guy, and he had, you know, tons of files and had lots of great contacts.
Starting point is 02:12:57 The only problem with John was he had no bullshit filter. Yeah. I mean, he could have a four-star general tell him something, and he'll write it and put her in a file, and he'll have some derelict that's walking by his house and go, I know Jello thinks, and he'll go, all right, and he'll put him in the same file, and they have the same level of credibility going, what are you talking about? You know? So, uh, he drove me crazy because of that. But, um, he did, you know, earlier on, he was, you know, less exotic with his theories. And, you know, it's spoken to George Knapp. I had seen it on TV. So at Gene Huff. And, um, anyway, he wound up doing
Starting point is 02:13:43 the appraisal on his house. And I went with Gene. Yeah. To, you know, help him measure it. And, uh, you know, you know, kind of got talking to John, and that's how we met. He's such an odd character because his father created the first business airliner in the U.S. Yeah, Lear Jet. Yeah, Bill Lear, Aviation Legend. Yeah, Bill Lear invented the autopilot, invented the eight-track tape. That's right. Radio Direction Finder.
Starting point is 02:14:07 Yeah, yeah. He was quite a guy. He was. And so. But he, I mean, he had a problem with John, too. I mean, John was eliminated from, you know, his will. And John showed. John showed me as well, you know, every paragraph said, except, you know, everybody gets this stuff, except John Olson Lear, except John Olson Lear, except, I mean, he was so angry at his kid.
Starting point is 02:14:33 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, completely removed him from the well. Maybe Apple fell far from the tree, like, you know, as far as, you know, aviation engineering prowess or something. But John Lear won all sorts of records as a pilot. He did. He was a very impressive pilot. Oh, yeah, credit is due where credit is due. I mean, he had all kinds of world records, and it's just his filter. John Lear was super into UFOs before you got the job at Area 51S4. Like, I think he had a UFO blog. And so do you think, like, why do you think it didn't come up in a background check that you were friends with this guy?
Starting point is 02:15:16 Oh, it did. Oh, it did. They absolutely asked me about. Oh, they asked you by John. Like the first day. Okay, okay. Yeah, what's your relationship with John? In fact, that might have been the first question.
Starting point is 02:15:27 Really? Yeah, at EG and G when I sat down. That's that, yeah, it's the first thing they mentioned. And what did you say? I said, he's a crazy friend. Yeah. And I don't remember what else, but I just, you know, told him some stuff. Yeah, he's met him.
Starting point is 02:15:44 Yeah. He's fascinating. And, I mean, John would just do the. the craziest stuff, you know, back then he'd, uh, he flew L-1011s, which is a big, big jet, you know, I know, it's 400 people on it or something like that. And, you know, occasionally he'd call and just, you know, be like a Tuesday night, eight o'clock, hey, you want to go to Minneapolis? Uh, okay. All right, maybe down at the airport, wear a suit, and come on. So he'd be a pilot and, you know, the pilot of the craft, and I'd come on.
Starting point is 02:16:20 He said, just come on the tarmac and tell this guy and, you know, walk up in the plane. And he'd tell the co-pilot and engineer, hey, this guy's from the FAA, so he's just going to be observing us and take it. So I'd take the jump seat behind the, you know, pilot and just fly with John. Did he talk to you about UFOs before you got the job at S4 Area 51? No, it didn't talk to me about him. Okay. And he spoke about them.
Starting point is 02:16:44 Did he ever? Yeah, I mean, he used to tell me there are aliens living in the mountains and alongside, you know, I think it's I-95 or something. Right. I said, yeah, there's a billion of them in there. It's so crazy. Did he ever show you anything Billy Myers-related? I don't recall.
Starting point is 02:17:07 Okay. I think when I described the craft to him and drew it, I think he brought out a Billy Meyer book. And he said, I think that's where I, in fact, it is. That's where I first saw it. So we saw, we showed him the Billy Myers tape. I said, yeah, that's not like the craft.
Starting point is 02:17:26 That's the craft. That's so interesting. So, yeah, he kind of helped you piece it together. Did he, was he still affiliated with, because he was a CIA cargo pilot until 1983, I think. Yeah, that's true. Did he continue flying for them after that? Or did he discipline?
Starting point is 02:17:43 I don't know. Okay. I don't think so. Yeah. Because he was, he's this interesting character to me because it seems like he has crazy access to Area 51. Like he's like snooping around and taking photos of like F117s. He even leaks the details of the F117 to George Knapp. But then he still like knows all the security guards there. So I'm like, what's his, what's his deal, you know?
Starting point is 02:18:06 I mean, I had been out at, you know, but before the S4 thing, you know, out in the desert in the middle of the night with binoculars and stuff. outside a tonopah. Yeah. You know, trying to get pictures of any new aircraft that's flying around. I mean, he was obviously a big aviation buff. Yeah. You know, and I was into that too. Sometimes I'd just go out and watch, you know,
Starting point is 02:18:29 fighters taken off from Nellis Air Force Base because you could get right up to the fence there. And, you know, so it was, yeah, he was definitely into snooping around and say whatever he could find out. I mentioned Jacques Valet earlier. He, you met him, right? Yeah, I met him and, you know, we spoke briefly. And then, from what I remember,
Starting point is 02:18:58 somebody was talking about making a movie with him. And then after hearing about me and talking, they started talking about, well, maybe we won't. We'll do it on Bob instead. And he was super pissed off. Really? Yeah. And then from that point on, all of a sudden, you know,
Starting point is 02:19:16 everything Bob said is crazy. Really? Yeah. But, yeah, initially he was... Because he writes, he wrote a book called Messengers of Deception, and he writes about you, and he says, you know, Bob Lazar seems to be very legit. But he also talks about this pine-saw drink he drinks, you know, this drink he drinks, and the memory lapses it caused.
Starting point is 02:19:40 Now, what, there's no memory lapse. No memory lapses. That's a bunch of nonsense. Okay. It's, you know, it was so. So it was like this vitamin B shot that was like immunity related. Yeah, yeah. That's all it was.
Starting point is 02:19:51 Again, you know, we're working with completely unknown materials. Yeah. We don't know what. And apparently people had severe reactions to some of the stuff, just touching the craft. So, yeah. So they had dealt with that before. I feel like I can defend you on 99.9% of things. And then the one thing I have trouble with is the MIT thing.
Starting point is 02:20:12 Because that's the other thing circulating is it was, did you get your math? masters there or you were sent there on a specific kind of program isolated program and then yeah and i did i i did a lot of auditing uh-huh in both places and then on on caltech for caltech what was that that so you were sent to mit and then caltech was different caltech was way before that okay that was you know but um and that i don't know i guess if i really look through old paperwork and stuff i can come up with things but that's never been yeah And I think George Knapp found, I think, some people who knew you at Caltech. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:20:50 Yeah. Yeah. One other question that people have is, why were you allowed to give him a tour of Los Alamos after, you know, you blew the whistle on Area 51? Like, why wasn't there this, like, nationwide directive at all of the national labs? Like, don't let this guy back. Look, it was really nothing. I mean, we got on a Southwest flight, came out there. running a car, drove up, and I still knew all the guards and stuff like that.
Starting point is 02:21:21 So it came up and he's like, Lazare, you're back. Yeah, just going in there to, you know, see a friend. It was just like a different time. Oh, you can't, Las Alamos is so much higher security now. I mean, it was so nonchalant back then. And we just wrote right into the experimental areas, came overhead. I said, George, this is my desk. Were you surprised?
Starting point is 02:21:44 Was it part of you nervous? that there would be some red alert? No, not at all. You were like, zero concern. You didn't worry that there was any sort of coordination between Area 51 and Los Angeles. Nobody knew it was going on there.
Starting point is 02:21:56 It was, like I said, it was very lax atmosphere. In fact, a year or two after that, they were so concerned about that. I think they called it the Tiger team came in to test security there, and they failed so horribly that they just, just redid everything. And, you know, after that point, you're, forget it. You're not going in.
Starting point is 02:22:22 But, yeah, I, like, still had keys and things. Yeah. Yeah, it was, it was not even a problem. When did you start United Nuclear? 99, 2000. Did you ever work with the government with United Nuclear? Yeah, yeah. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 02:22:40 Okay. Yeah. I mean, we still, we supply them, you know, they train. Department of Homeland Security, FBI. I mean, we sell them stuff all the time, especially when they're training people to use radiation detection equipment. I mean, we'll give them or sell them, you know,
Starting point is 02:23:00 radioactive sources so they can go hide something in a warehouse and give the trainees a Geiger counter, go, go find it, you know. Did you ever wonder why they didn't view you as a liability given your, you know, late 80s experience at S4 Area 51? and they were just down to do contract work with you? I don't know. I don't know. You know, but one hand doesn't know what the other is doing in the government.
Starting point is 02:23:24 Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's kind of a mess. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, and it's, I mean, in fact, part of, you know, United Nuclear, when it was just beginning, some of the stuff we're selling was kind of questionable. You know, this could potentially, you know, be used for explosives or stuff like that. Great. So went down to the FBI and,
Starting point is 02:23:45 reviewed everything with them. And they went, no, you can, that's cool. Went down to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. No, we're good, you know, postal service. No, everything's good. All right, great. We're going to go selling it. And then, you know, rated by the Consumer Product Safety Commission. They come in with a SWAT team with my wife up out of bed with, you know, an M-16 pointed interface. Jesus Christ. You know, it's like, we checked with everybody. I didn't check with us. So, Don't you guys talk? So, yeah, one hand has no idea what the other's doing when it comes to the government.
Starting point is 02:24:20 Yeah, no, I believe that. Is there any part of you that thinks that they wanted you to come out and that they wanted some frameworks? Because to your point, it's maladaptive to have this completely shut out from like to have a STEM student who's talented and, you know, some random state. Why go through the complicated? I mean, why make it complicated and make me do it? Right. Why not just do it yourself? Put out the high level framework and say, yeah.
Starting point is 02:24:48 This whole complicated scenario with this guy coming in and hope that he does something you want, that doesn't make any sense. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I think that's fair. There's this John Lear interview where, again, it's impossible to parse what the hell is going on with that guy. Look, I have heard John Lear tell my story. Yeah. And it is so wrong. It's unbelievable.
Starting point is 02:25:12 Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's unbelievable. I mean, he puts, I mean, he inserts himself in there in a prominent position, you know, well, I got Bob, you know, to get the job to hear and just, and what are you taught? It's completely inaccurate. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And he, in this interview, he says, like, yeah, Admiral McClellan, who was a Navy admiral, came to me and he was MJ level, you know, MJ, obviously in the UFO lore would be like the elite, you know, kind of committee that governs this whole. topic came to me and he said, we got to get Bob on the job because we know that we can hide his. It's in some ways it's corroborating your story because it's saying like, no, he was there. He was at S4. He was working on this stuff. But we need to get Bob specifically because we know we can have plausible deniability because
Starting point is 02:26:02 they'll never be able to find his MIT records. It turns out that MJ1, the head of MJ12, is a guy named Admiral Mike McClellan. He wanted to get some of the information out because he didn't want to, he thought that some of this information should be out in the public. We don't need to keep all this secrecy. So he decided trying to figure out a way to get it to the public. So he knew that I was a blabber mouth and I would tell anything I knew. They investigated Bob Buzar and they knew that he was a genius, but that he had a background such that they could instantly discredit him.
Starting point is 02:26:44 And then so I thought about that for a while and I was like, what that? What is this? And I couldn't even find an Admiral McClellan. I've heard that name before. You have. That's interesting that you've heard it. Yeah, I have definitely heard the name. It could have come from John Lear.
Starting point is 02:27:00 But I don't know. I mean that the thing is some of the stuff he's saying absolutely can be true. or absolutely cannot. Totally. I don't know. But, I mean, you know, I love the guy. He was a great friend. He just thinks differently.
Starting point is 02:27:15 And, I mean, it's sad he died. I wish I had spent more time with him. Yeah. But after I moved, it was just impractical. But, yeah, I mean, if you're talking about statements John Lear made, boy, it's tough. It's really tough to find out what's accurate and what's not. decoding the voinich manuscript or something.
Starting point is 02:27:37 Yeah, yeah. But yeah, no, he's a complicated guy. He, so I think, and we talked about this a little last night, and maybe this is an interesting follow-up for this show, is I think he might have been talking about a guy named Mike McConnell, who became NSA director later. But he was involved in some S-4 Area 51 stuff related to Dan Barish, whose story, I think, honestly holds up a lot less than,
Starting point is 02:28:03 your story. But it's, you know, it has to be noted because it's one other guy who's mentioning S4. And so Mike McConnell's kind of involved there and he was a Navy Admiral at the time. So I think about that and I'm like, I wonder if Mike McConnell was somewhat involved. When you came out as Dennis, was that a shot across the bow against Dennis Mariani? Yeah, sure was. So you were trying to kind of get at him a little bit?
Starting point is 02:28:30 Yeah. Yeah. What were your feelings? towards him kind of personally. Were you resentful or were you, yeah, how'd you feel towards him? I guess somewhat resentful. I don't know. It's hard to tap into how I felt back then. Yeah. Why do you think, and I know Luigi, you might have some theories here too, why do you think Dennis wanted to meet up with you at the end of this whole saga? At the casino.
Starting point is 02:29:05 up with him at the casino and then you're speaking to him and jean huff is looking and he's just not even like looking at you like what what is that about i don't know i think dennis really had something to say and uh i don't know i don't know if people from s4 got there and changed his mind i don't know if he intentionally wanted me to go out there just to get me away from the house I really don't know Because you got back to the house and something Yeah, things were missing Yeah
Starting point is 02:29:37 Anything of consequence? Yeah, yeah And you can talk about No Okay So You know I mean
Starting point is 02:29:48 I don't know It's all guesswork Yeah I mean when we When we sat down Even Gene Huff I spoke to Gene Huff
Starting point is 02:29:56 About that And Gene's perspective To that Was he saw Bob walk up to to Dennis. And it's an important part because I always think about the fact that Gene Huff was there. Joe was also there. Yeah, yeah. But yeah, we were all, we all had eyes on him. Yeah. And and what Gene said was what, you know, Bob Lazare walks up to this guy, Dennis, this blonde, you know, military looking guy. And Bob's talking to him. The guy's not even looking at him.
Starting point is 02:30:23 And that caught Gene's attention. It's like, you know, if Bob was making that up, what did he do? Just pick out a guy out of nowhere. and starts talking. If the guy was a nobody, he would have turned around and going like, what do you want? Yeah, he would have been like, stop talking. Yeah, no, I mean, I kept saying, Dennis, Dennis, I'm here, you know, what do you want?
Starting point is 02:30:43 What's going on? I don't remember my exact words, but he never even looked up at me. And, yeah, I just walked over to Gene and said he's, I don't know what the deal is with Dennis. We both turned around and he was gone. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. That's so interesting.
Starting point is 02:31:01 So a part of me wonders if he himself wanted to come out after you or something. Or there was something he needed to. Unfortunately, it's all speculation. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He could have wanted to come out. He might have been part of, well, let's get Bob out of a house. Yeah. There's a thousand, but there's no direction to go in.
Starting point is 02:31:23 I mean, that was so striking from the documentaries. They put a, your gun was set up in your own car and the doors were open in the, in the, parking lot, right? And then you walk. Yeah, that happened more than once. That's scary, man. Yeah. Did you? Yeah. And I mean, we would lock it and test the door and because it had happened before and go, all right, it's locked, locked, locked. Check, check every single thing. Okay, Mario, it's locked. It's locked. Okay, we go into the gym, we come back out. Everything's open. Did you, was there ever a moment where you were like, over 50% I might get assassinated? Yeah, because it's why I said we have to look under the car,
Starting point is 02:32:04 see if there's something wired in there or a bomb. I mean, we were even afraid. The only thing that wasn't open, I think was the hood where the engine was. So we were afraid to open that, you know, and finally did but looked over the car. But yeah, I was afraid there was a bomb on there or somebody wired it up. But as George said, I think they were just screwing with me. And Mario, you know, Mario talked a lot with him, and we've really, really spent a lot of time.
Starting point is 02:32:37 And it's hard to, he also kept saying, it's really hard to, like, explain and express what that worry was. Because I was with, he said, I was with Bob all the time. And we were scared that something was going to blow up. And he says, I was so going through my hard times that I didn't care. I just told Bob, stay out and I'll try it, and he would start the car, because he was like, fuck it, I'm going to do it. But you could sense that even from Mario's perspective, there was a real worry. And so, you know, this is something that clearly was causing a lot of worry, not just for you, but for Mario as well.
Starting point is 02:33:18 Because it's like, what the hell is going on? The doors are unlocked again, and, you know, why are they doing this? So clearly you think something could go wrong. So whether they were trying to just intimidate or do something, whatever that was, it was happening according to these guys. Did you get the sense that there were maybe mob ties? Like there was some, you know, they talk about the UFO legacy program. Sometimes like it's a cartel or like a mafia that exists outside of the state. Did you get the sense?
Starting point is 02:33:53 And obviously you're, you know, going back and forth from Vegas. And Vegas is a hotspot for that sort of thing. Did you ever get that sense? Not that it was the mob per se. Yeah. But it was like these guys were disconnected from the government. Yeah. They were like their own.
Starting point is 02:34:10 Yeah, they were their own cabal. You kind of get that. Like even I feel like John Lear was like, like he had, you know, there's a picture with him and G. Gordon Liddy. Do you know what that is? Yeah. I know the name. I don't remember who he is.
Starting point is 02:34:23 He's this FBI agent who was this kind of agent provocateur who was very involved in Watergate and stuff. And you get the sense that that whole world, like the people, the Mormons who were around Howard Hughes and there was a lot of mob, you know, there's a lot of mob activity there. And it was like they were kind of like, you could, you could see a civilian government official calling them and them being like, fuck off is the vibe. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. We're doing our thing. Yeah, yeah. Is undeniable.
Starting point is 02:34:54 Yeah, yeah. You think so? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. I'm 100% on that. Yeah. I know you've also, because, you know, you live in Montreal and there's stuff there, and I'm sure you've bumped into things, people.
Starting point is 02:35:06 Yeah, I always talk about it when I talk, when I hear about all these government organizations and government secrets and the intelligence community. And I think a lot of researchers and a lot of people researching this should also pay. attention to what organized crime did back then, back in the 60s, the 70s, the 80s, the 90s, and how those organizations operated and what they did. Because it's a very similar way of keeping secrets. And, you know, I think that there is some tie somewhere. I'm not saying that they're involved and they're in charge of anything. That's not what I'm saying. But I'm saying there is clear motivation for somebody who's trying to keep a secret to have ties with, let's say, the mob,
Starting point is 02:35:56 so that if ever something or somebody does start going too rogue, well, you could basically scare that person and say, well, you know, these guys will come after you. And that'll scare somebody more than a lawyer will come after you. That's right. Well, it seems like they were going after your marriage. And, you know, they were going after your marriage. And, And, like, they, it's all blackmail techniques. Like, that's what it, it feels like. It's compromise systems. And you look at...
Starting point is 02:36:26 Yeah, they weren't taking the legal angle at all. No. No. Which is really, if you want to enforce something, like, that's the way you do it. Which is pretty wild. I mean, you see this stuff with the Epstein thing, too, where it's just, they're just, clearly is this distributed kind of compromise system. And it deals with spooky sign.
Starting point is 02:36:45 I don't know if you're tracking any of this stuff, but like... Yeah, I started looking into it. Isn't it wild? Yeah, it's, it's really wild. And then he says, and it's so widespread. It's widespread. And here's what's crazy. He's interviewed by Steve Bannon.
Starting point is 02:37:00 And Epstein is. This is at the end of his life. Yeah. And he goes, why did you put Zora Ranch where you put it? And he goes, well, you know, a bunch of Los Alamos physicists were retiring. And so, you know, they were kind of aging out. And I wanted to speak with them. Los Alamos, which was the heart.
Starting point is 02:37:18 energy lab up in New Mexico was losing all its scientists. And you bought your property out in New Mexico to be near that? Yes, because the scientists were going to be, they cut the funding for high energy physics. And you're like, oh my God. How wax is our DOE, you know, Department of Energy security? And then he realized, you know, Bill Richardson was kind of in with the Clintons and he was a secretary of energy. And he's there and he's just systematically siphoning American nuclear secrets.
Starting point is 02:37:47 And then he goes, there's another email where he said, I killed Pons back in the day or whatever. And he's talking about Pons and Fleischmen who are claiming to get cold fusion results. And so it's like, what is Epstein dealing with cold fusion? And then he's hanging out at Harvard with the math department. None of that makes any sense. It's weird. None of that makes any sense. Really strange.
Starting point is 02:38:06 I used to drive by that ranch all the time. I lived really close to it when I lived in New Mexico. Yeah. And they always called it the Victoria Secret Ranch because they were models there. Yeah. Everyone knew that as the Victoria's Secret Ranch. So you would drive by Epstein's ranch and they would call it the Victoria Secret Ranch. I mean, not right by it, but as you drive it on the road, you can see it up on that.
Starting point is 02:38:27 We know why they called it that. It's because he was close with Les Wexner, who was the CEO and founder of Victoria's Secret. Yeah. So you would drive by there and they would call it that. Everybody called it that, yeah. No way. We'd drive up to Los Alamos to pick up alpha radiation probes that my company did. and, you know, we'd come back.
Starting point is 02:38:47 But, yeah, every time we drove out, we passed by it a couple of times. That's so nuts. Damn. So what do you, do you, because, like, it's also for the people that are like, disbelieve your stuff. It's like, look at all this bizarre. It's like this cabal is controlling science or something, you know? It's so weird.
Starting point is 02:39:07 That is really weird. Yeah. And it's, you know, I'll say it, it's just, we're just talking about Epstein. That's one guy. That's one guy. It's not just one guy. Clearly not. No, it's not just one guy.
Starting point is 02:39:23 He's a front. Yeah, it's just not. I mean, he might have been the ringleader, but it's, uh, there's a lot of people. Or he might have been an extension of something much. Yeah, she could be. But he was obsessed with the Casimir effect and he would hold these. Oh, he was.
Starting point is 02:39:36 Oh, yeah, yeah. He would hold these gravity conferences. And then the very fact that he's saying, do you know that for a fact? Yeah, this is all. the emails. This is all fact. And there's an old colleague of mine, Eric Weinstein that talks to the Casimir effect. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. So this old colleague of mine, Eric Weinstein has this theory of everything in physics where, you know, involves gauging gravity instead of quantizing gravity beyond my pay grade. But I find it interesting. And Epstein like somehow knew about his theory
Starting point is 02:40:08 before like just about anybody else did. And so Weinstein's like, how is Epstein's like, how is Epstein so tied in with the Harvard math department? Do you think it was just his hobby or something like science was his hobby and he just had money so he, uh, the ability to connect to these? I think there, you read his emails and it's like there's somebody behind him who knew exactly what to look for and, but he didn't know. He was like a low level version of it. And so he'll say things like, you need to boost your physics.
Starting point is 02:40:39 Time is much weirder than you think. It's actually just a function of the vibration of cesium atoms. and you're like, who's giving you this stuff, you know? And then he's sort of like mining people for the info and weird. I mean, did he, he said that? He said that, yeah, yeah. Which is true. It is kind of.
Starting point is 02:40:58 It's an atomic clock. It's just a vibrating seismic. Yeah, yeah, I mean, it's true. I don't know if that's what time is, but it's our perception of time. Time is very weird, isn't it? Wouldn't you say just from a pure physics perspective, It's an anomaly. It's strange. Like, like, it's, we can't, it's the most used noun in the English language, but we can only define it with respect to the movement of macroscopic bodies or to oscillations on an electromagnetic wave.
Starting point is 02:41:30 But it's not like a, it's a thing that we're like, it's almost like fish in a fish bowl where like the fish are trying to even describe what water is. But they don't, they can't because they're in it. Yeah. And then we're in time. Yeah, you have to be outside of it to describe it. I mean, that's that's it. And you can't be outside. It's just a concept that makes us happy is what time is.
Starting point is 02:41:53 Do you think that there's something about time being weird that might help explain some of the UFO stuff? Yeah, I think there's definitely something there. Yeah. Because if gravity's off. There's gigantic chunks that are missing from physics. And I think some people have access to that. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:42:16 I think so, too. Yeah, but I mean, the cosmic red shift. The other thing that this guy, Burkhardheim, says, is that the cosmic red shift is the repulsive form of gravity. And if you look at dark energy, you could literally just look it up. It's like, it's not one of the four fundamental forces, but it's just, you know, the universe is inflating. I'm not sure dark energy really exists. Right.
Starting point is 02:42:38 Yeah. Yeah. And Dark Matter, too. Yeah, I'm not really buying either one of it. Dark Matters never been detected, but it's just there to... It's a placeholder. To justify gravity's weakness. Yes. Yes.
Starting point is 02:42:49 Yeah. And then... I mean, to me, that's, I always viewed, that's what Gravitons were. That's why this caught my attention because he's back on the Graviton bandwagon. Well, gravitons are interesting because as early as the 50s, you know, there's all this, like, crazy hardcore anti-gravity research, and then it kind of disappears. Yeah. But you had a bunch of...
Starting point is 02:43:09 of people saying we're going to be gravity. It's right around the bend. There's a guy named George Trimble, who's a VP at Martin Corporation's RIAS Research for Institute for Advanced Study. And he was this really wacky thinker. And he worked with Lewis Whitten and probably Townsend Brown. And, you know, they would say, like, it's going to take us the time that it took to build the atom bomb to basically beat gravity. And they were Stanley Desser and Richard Arnawitt, who were famous physicists at the time from Princeton, were talking. talking about gravitons. And they were like, we have a very clear theory of gravitons and we know how to do this. And the two things that come up for gravity where there's a lot of smoke, but no fire, is the thing we just talked about with Bueller, extremely high electric field differentials, creating thrust. And then the second thing is very fast rotating spinning superconductors. Those two things seem to have some. But is that actually gravity? So there's another force. 30 years has gone by
Starting point is 02:44:09 and I've kind of been doing my own research and I'm just more convinced that I'm right about that. And can you say anything about that? What do you think you're right about? That there's another force
Starting point is 02:44:27 and it's not gravity. And what is the, if you were to characterize that force as distinct from gravity, so gravity clearly you'd have all these other byproduct effect. the photons and what what's what does this force do that's different what does it what does it look like well it's a it's a repelling force but i i think it's something that works closer to the way you would think in a science fiction movie you can have gravity and anti-gravity but you really can
Starting point is 02:44:59 i think gravity is just an attractive force i think this other force you can you can to make simplify it push or pull And I think it also affects the flow of time exactly like gravity does. I think it affects light. It does some of the observations you would have with gravity would also overlap in this other force. But I think it's a unique force. Have you ever measured this force? Next question.
Starting point is 02:45:37 All right, yeah. You have? Yeah. How have you measured it? No, no, no, there's no follow-up question. Okay, okay, okay, okay, fine, fine, fine. Is there anything kind of high level that you can say as far as your, the goal of your research, you know, post the experience? Like, what you would love to do.
Starting point is 02:46:00 Just to duplicate anything. Yeah. Okay. I'm sure I can. You think you can? Yeah, I'm sure I can. You feel confident. I'm 100% confident.
Starting point is 02:46:10 Yeah. I'm going to, yeah. Have you already gotten some interesting results? Yeah. Okay. That's why I'm 100% confident. Yeah, the thing is just to scale stuff up. Okay.
Starting point is 02:46:20 What do you hope your legacy is? So like 200 years from now, a kid. No one's going to know who I am. I don't think that's right, man. Think about it. Like if there are these, you know, this lineage of technology that is completely separate. Come on. I'm going to be overwritten by people.
Starting point is 02:46:39 Look, there's other. Bob Lazar's and things that are going to come along. Look what's happening and all the people that came out since then. You know, there's going to be other people like me. Eventually, some more of this is going to come out. And yeah, they're amazing. They're amazing people who've come out since you, first and foremost. Yeah, yeah. And there's going to be bigger, more important ones that you just aren't going to look back to the 80s and think you're just going to focus on those guys. Well, I would put it the invert. I would say if you have like an army of people coming out after you, the fact that you're the first makes it even more interesting.
Starting point is 02:47:13 I think it's more likely you'd be forgotten if no one comes out after you. Do you hope to vindicate your own experience through your own scientific experimentation? Yeah, I do. Yeah, I do. Yeah, I do. That's exciting. That's cool. But I have no idea what other people are doing. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I know exactly what not to do. That's what we did at us for. So it's actually a big leap forward.
Starting point is 02:47:39 And you saw one hanging up against the wall? Yeah, it was sitting on the wall and it had, there's actually an error in the movie. It has one hole in the room of it. Not two. But yeah, there was just a hole with it bent out, clearly bent out as if it was shot from the bottom. Why do you think, oh, it looked like it was shot? Yeah. Interesting.
Starting point is 02:48:07 So do you think it was shot with like a kinetic weapon or mechanical weapon? No, no question. Wow. And do you think it was a human weapon that shot? it. I don't know. It looks like something we would have done to stand it up, shoot through it, see how we can penetrate this material. Whoa. Do you, have you ever heard anything about like electromagnetic pulses and UFOs and them taking out UFOs, taking them down or anything? Well, that was that was the other directive of the project. It was directed energy.
Starting point is 02:48:39 Well, yeah, it depends what you're talking about. There's, I mean, our directive was duplicate the propulsion system at any cost is directive one and directive two was be able to disable the system at a distance at any cost. Do you think? And then, so that's somewhat directed energy, but then there is also Project Sidekick, which is a weapon. So that's also directed energy. So, yeah, it kind of depends where you're going with that.
Starting point is 02:49:12 I guess had you heard of any UFOs prior to that getting shot down with directed energy with electromagnetic pull? No. I think the only thing I ever heard prior to that was stories about the Roswell craft getting hit by lightning and crashing or something. I think it's the only... Are there any of these stories? Do you think that Roswell happened? Are there any of these stories you lend Credence to? I don't know much about the Roswell.
Starting point is 02:49:42 crash other than, you know, what I've heard, but it sure seems like they were working real hard to cover something up. That's true. The Roswell crash was not one crash. It was not in one place only, though. It might have been a round of two. Yeah. Yeah. I really think it was, there was something that happened in the air, and there's, like,
Starting point is 02:50:06 debris that was scattered all over Mac Brazzles Ranch, and then there was the action. And then there was the actual pod with the beings that was crashed. I think it was like two miles away where the hikers found it with the kids that were hiking. And so clearly it was two different places. And the bamboo, the pieces that looked like bamboo with the whole writing on it, that was at Mac Brazzell with the memory metal. And then the pod, the only information we have of that is the bodies. and one of them was already being eaten by some animals.
Starting point is 02:50:43 No way. Yeah. The body was being eaten by some animals. One of them, from what I remember reading at the time, one of them was obviously dead and it was decaying. Like there was clearly some animals that got to it. Wow. So, but that was.
Starting point is 02:50:58 I hadn't heard that. But the only thing I remember about that was Jesse Marcel was the officer. Yeah. Right. And he said when, you know, they came to take pictures or the pictures they took, he said, that wasn't the stuff that we found. Whoa. What general Rami. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:51:18 He said, yeah, they replaced it with. He said, that's not what we found. Well, that's the guy. And there's that iconic photo, and it's him with this, like, tinfoily weather balloon thing. Yeah. Yeah. He claims that the material was right off to the side of the frame. It's so interesting.
Starting point is 02:51:33 Yeah, that's not the stuff. And his son, who's an air force. flight surgeon said that he took the material home and he played with the material. Yeah, on the kitchen table with his wife. Yeah. And here's where stuff gets even crazier. In 1949, there is a contract between Battelle Memorial Institute and Wright Airfield, which turns into Wright Patterson, which is where the wreckage, the Roswell wreckage, was rumored to be taken. And it's like around alloys, like titanium, different titanium alloy and this titanium nickel alloy. And niton...
Starting point is 02:52:06 Night and all. Night and all, as you know, memory metal. Memory metal. Yeah. Nightenol was classified, essentially showed up in a Navy lab in the 60s. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:52:17 And that's what Jesse Marcel describes the material as. Yeah, because that's, that's really indestructible stuff. Yes. And I remember him saying, it's vernacular. We whack that as hard as we could, you know, right? And it didn't bend.
Starting point is 02:52:37 And I remember that. They tried to burn it. They tried to cut into it. Yeah. And it just goes back into its original shape. And I just actually interviewed. Yeah, it's one of the, I mean, you can take that metal and flex it a million times. And it doesn't crack.
Starting point is 02:52:54 It's what they, I mean, they use that in artificial hearts because it can keep flexing and it just doesn't wear. It's wild. And then, and then you have Philip Corso saying that he, helped dole out a lot of this material and it made it into the civil sector because of his position. He was, you know, Pentagon's like, you know, foreign technology desk or whatever, chief. And so you have this contract from 49. Nobody knew what Nittinall was, Nitenau was. And then in the 60s, it appears in public randomly at a Navy lab.
Starting point is 02:53:27 It's interesting. That's really interesting. I never heard any of that. And I just interviewed a guy who was a witness actually of the Varsenians. crash in the 1990s, 1996 in Brazil, and he says the same thing. He says he held the material in his hands,
Starting point is 02:53:43 and he would kind of mess with it, and then it would go back into its original form. So, did you ever experience anything like that with material that would go back into its original form? Did you hear anything about that? No, other than working with night and all. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:53:57 But you did work with night and all? I sell it. But did you work, you didn't work with it at a score? No, no, no. Okay, okay. Okay, so you didn't hear anything around. around that there. No, not a peep.
Starting point is 02:54:08 Did you hear anything about any other materials? No, that's material science. We're not allowed to know that stuff. Oh, okay. So that was a whole other interesting. Yeah, which is really stupid. And you saw a photo or photos of an alien autopsy, right? Yeah, if in fact that was true.
Starting point is 02:54:28 Do you think? Yeah, it was part of the briefing. What did the photos look like? I guess if you want to call it a gray, something small. It had a T cut in the chest and there was one single organ removed from the chest.
Starting point is 02:54:46 Was that kind of a visceral experience for you? Was that kind of, you know, gnarly? Or were you like, no, at this point I'm going, what am I looking through? Yeah. You know, it was just kind of all glancing through. Like, give me a break.
Starting point is 02:55:05 Yeah. There were rumors that the program was going to maybe move to Indonesia or Southeast Asia when you were leaving? No, no. They were anxious to move the project out of there completely. And, you know, ideally they said they would have loved to go out to the South Pacific, maybe Quadulent Island or something. But they said the expenses would have been so great, it's just impossible. But they just wanted to get away from eyes. It's just too close to things.
Starting point is 02:55:37 If you had to guess, do you think that the program is completely out of Area 51 and in some foreign place now? Yeah, I don't believe it's there anymore. That would make sense. Yeah, I don't believe it's there. I think that moved way long ago. Yeah. And you discovered Element 115, right? It wasn't discovered.
Starting point is 02:55:59 It's something Barry and I were working on. Okay. So, I mean, you can't really say I discovered it. Okay. Okay. You know. Oh, I thought your contribution was that you just... Our contribution. It was what I was doing. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 02:56:12 Yeah. But what I can't say it was just me. What technique? But it was the... God, what the hell was it that we were using? Oh, atomic absorption spectroscopy. Atomic absorption spectroscopy. Yeah. And you did that. Yeah, yeah. I mean, we had the equipment there.
Starting point is 02:56:31 We also had something to do X-ray diffraction to. Wow. And, yeah, it wasn't, Barry was much more familiar with the equipment. Wow. But you don't know the exact isotope? No. Did you know it at one point? Like when you discovered it?
Starting point is 02:56:47 Yeah, yeah. You did? Yeah, yeah. But you forgot the- Yeah, I have no idea. Oh, man. Because that would be, that would. Yeah, I know it would really help.
Starting point is 02:56:55 It would really help. It would also be a Nobel Prize for you. It would be like, oh, my God, they figured out like a due isotope at that level. No, but I'd have to be able to produce. it or, you know, right, right, right. So I wouldn't get anything. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:57:08 I mean, but, you know, the Lab in Darmstadt, Germany produced, you know, a few items of 115. So, I mean, they discovered 115. Yes. So, I mean, they, they made it, you know, we. Yeah. We recognized it. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:57:23 So. But if you, if you. I don't think it would help you because it's not like, you know, the way we try to synthesize, you know, new elements is, you know, taking ions and, you know, smashing them together and it's kind of whatever comes out comes out it's not like you can go we're going to make a specific isotope and make it all stick together it's just like you know it's the old smashing the Swiss watch against a concrete wall oh look what came out you know that's it if you possibly took a little bit home though could you do some of those techniques you know
Starting point is 02:57:55 I couldn't you couldn't because you don't have I can't yeah you need the equipment I mean you need the equipment like you know accelerators and Yeah. That's something like that. So you wouldn't have the stable isotope at home. Or you do, or maybe. Well, I don't have it at my house. Okay.
Starting point is 02:58:16 If that's what you're asking. But didn't you, at one point, maybe take it home? Yeah. So that, but then. Are we recording? Yeah, but. So no. So no.
Starting point is 02:58:29 Okay. Okay. Yeah. But then can't, but then couldn't you figure out the isotope? If theoretically you did, or now? Yeah. Okay. Yeah, you could.
Starting point is 02:58:41 All I'd have to do is have it again. Okay. Oh, I see. That's a bummer. I hosted a debate between Eric Weinstein and Eric Davis. Eric Weinstein's this former colleague of mine who's a physicist, and then Eric Davis is this other guy in UFO world who focuses on exotic propulsion. Weinstein said that he was kind of exasperated.
Starting point is 02:59:11 He was like, why are there no theoretical physicists on the program? But you talk about theoretical physicists on site at S4. Oh, for sure. Okay. I think they were exhausted by him. And I think they kept going over that road and never got anywhere. Interesting. And they were looking for just, let's just do something out of left field and see what we come up with.
Starting point is 02:59:33 So, no, I don't know. Again, that's what made me think, this is in gravity at all. This is a new force entirely. Yeah. And you know what I found interesting to you is you said Bismuth seemed to have come up. Like that was something. There is something about Bismuth. You might be starting to notice a through line starting to emerge in this conversation. And it keeps leading back to the same place. To put it bluntly, Bob's work at S4 looks a whole lot like all of the documented knowledge we have on anti-gravity experiments done in the last 100 years. Now, again, these claims don't lie in the realm of conventional proven science.
Starting point is 03:00:17 But while there's no proverbial fire, there is a whole lot of smoke around them. I'm talking not only of the experiments of Townsend Brown, but of Eugene Pekletnoff, Ning Lee, and others. And one single element might tie all of these stories together. Bismuth There's a reason why Bob Lazzar kept hearing about it at S-4. Here's why Bismith matters. We'll break down the science as clearly as we can. It starts with something called a K-factor.
Starting point is 03:00:47 A K-factor, or dielectric constant, is simply a material's ability to store and discharge electric fields. Now this has important implications for historical anti-gravity experiments. You see, the higher the K-factor, the more thrust or propulsion you see in Townsend Brown's capacitor experiments. Brown spent his career searching for high K-materials that could amplify the effect he'd discovered. Bismith is one of them, and it's often mentioned in the context of his anti-gravity work. There's even an interview from this guy, Louis Witten, who's at RIAS, which is Martin Corporation pre-Lockied merger, their anti-gravity outfit, where they were studying sort of the most exotic
Starting point is 03:01:29 propulsion modalities. And he says in this interview with the American Institute of Physics, there's a guy named Townsend who claimed to have an isotope of Bismith that repelled instead of attracted. Material that works well for historical anti-gravity experiments comes up in the UFO reverse engineering program. Go figure, but it gets weirder. Bismith in Element 115, Muscovium, share the same number of valence electrons. Valence electrons are the electrons in the outermost shell of an atom, the ones that determined how an element bonds, reacts, and behaves chemically. Bismith has five, Muscovium, or Element 115, has five. They sit in the same column of the periodic table, Group 15,
Starting point is 03:02:16 which means they have essentially the same chemical personality, the same bonding geometry, the same family of crystal structures, the same tendency to form the layered compounds that produce the most exotic quantum behavior known to material science. Lazar described Element 115 as the fuel source for the craft's propulsion system. Mind you, this was in 1989, before Element 115 had ever been synthesized or named. When it finally was synthesized in 2003, it turned out to be a nictogen, a group 15 element, the same chemical family as Bismuth.
Starting point is 03:02:53 And Bismith is basically the most electromagnetically bizarre, stable element on Earth. That's either the most chemically literate lucky guess in history, or it isn't a guess at all. Now, here's where the science gets genuinely strange. Bismuth is one of the most unusual elements on the periodic table. Most high-k materials are passive. They sit there, holding charge, and do nothing else. Bismuth is different. It fights back.
Starting point is 03:03:20 Expose Bismuth to a magnetic field, and instead of being attracted, the way iron pushes towards a magnet, it pushes away. This property is called diamagnetism, and Bismuth has more of it than any other stable element on Earth, not slightly more, dramatically, anomalously, inexplicably more.
Starting point is 03:03:42 The reason lives inside the atom itself. Every electron does two things simultaneously. It orbits the nucleus like a planet around a star, and it spins on its own axis like a tiny top. In lighter elements, these two motions barely register each other, but Bismuth sits near the bottom of the periodic table at element 83, one of the heaviest stable elements that exists. And in super heavy elements, something extraordinary happens.
Starting point is 03:04:12 The electrons in the outer shell move so fast that they enter what physicists call the relativistic regime. They're traveling at a meaningful fraction of the speed of light. And when something moves that fast, the universe starts playing by different rules. At those speeds, Einstein's physics takes over from Newton's. One consequence is that these screaming, Curling outer electrons generate a powerful magnetic field just from their own motion,
Starting point is 03:04:40 and that magnetic field slams into their own spin. This is a process called spin-orbit coupland. In Bismuth, it's ferociously strong, so strong that Bismith's electrons become, in a sense, magnetically self-aware, generating an opposing field in response to anything applied to them from the outside. So that's why Bismith has anomalous diameters. diamagnetism. The electrons aren't just passive. They're pushing back. The most amazing thing is leaning into it, putting all your force on that, nothing moves at all.
Starting point is 03:05:18 And when the reactor's off, you can easily slide it. This also makes Bismuth a natural topological dopant, meaning when you introduce it into certain crystalline materials, it induces what physicists call topologically protected quantum states. These are electron states so geomest, so geometrically locked into the structure of the material, that they can't be destroyed by disorder or impurities. They are, in a very real sense, protected by the shape of reality itself. Element 115, with the same five outer electrons as Bismuth, would have dramatically stronger relativistic effects, and it would theoretically be an even more powerful topological dopin.
Starting point is 03:06:00 Best hosted physicists predict and calcogenide crystal structures, which happened to be a very powerful topological dopin, happen to be the exact crystal family that Bismuth-based topological insulators already prefer. Same column, same electrons, the dial just turned up to a level we've never engineered. Okay, I know what you're thinking. How do you get from this exotic chemistry jargon to UFO propulsion or a force that bends space-time? Well, here's where the chemistry ends, and something bigger begins. In Einstein's general relativity, energy and momentum in all forms, including the energy stored in fast-spinning relativistic electrons, technically curves spacetime.
Starting point is 03:06:49 Every electron is, in the most literal physical sense, warping the fabric of the universe around it. Now, for ordinary matter, this effect is so incomprehensibly tiny, it effectively doesn't exist. But a small group of serious physicists began asking dangerous questions in the 1990s. What if, instead of the same? of spinning randomly in all directions, their gravitational effects canceling each other into noise. You could align them into a single coherent state, all pointing in the same direction,
Starting point is 03:07:29 all pushing together. This was the life's work of Dr. Ning Lee, a physicist who dared to dabble in anti-gravity. More specifically, she worked in graviton magnetic theory. Lee was a woman who eventually left her position at the University of Alabama Huntsville to work full-time at Redstone Arsenal on research so sensitive it effectively vanished from public view. And the chair of her department at University of Alabama Huntsville, Larry Smalley, was so high conviction in her work that he left with her. Before she died, Lee proposed that in superconductors, materials where electrons surrender their individual identities and merge into a collective quantum state. The gravitonagnetic effect of those electrons normally washed away by thermal chaos
Starting point is 03:08:18 would suddenly snap into alignment. They'd become coherent, directional. She was trying to build a gravity engine in a laboratory. Let's compare that with Bob Lazar's work on UFOs in the 80s. Years before Ningli's work ever became public, Lazar described three cylindrical emitters at the base of a craft. The emitters at the base of Lazars' craft didn't produce thrust in the traditional sense. They didn't push against air or expel mass. They generated a directed alteration of the gravitational field itself, that the craft would then just fall into, not propulsion, geometry. The craft didn't move through space. It literally bent space, and space carried it. That description, organized field-generating devices producing a direct-
Starting point is 03:09:07 directional gravitational effect by aligning and focusing a force that normally cancels itself to zero is structurally, almost precisely what Ning Li was theorizing in a laboratory thousands of miles away, using completely different source material, arriving at exactly the same place years later. When the craft is in operation, there is a high voltage detectable on the skin of the craft. And then there's the hull of the craft. Lazar said that he believed the craft's whole material was an electric, basically a material that permanently stores an electric field, the electrical equivalent of a permanent magnet. I think the material the craft is made from is an electric.
Starting point is 03:09:51 And so it always, just like a magnet always has a magnetic field to it, and electric always has an electrostatic field to it. And I think that's certainly something important. Again, Bismuth Titanate is one of the finest electric materials known, used in high-temperature sensor applications precisely because of its stability. Now, if you were designing a whole material for a craft that needed to interact with gravity wave emitters, maintain a permanent electric field, and respond to both electric and magnetic stimuli simultaneously,
Starting point is 03:10:25 the material that checks every single box is Bismith ferrite. That's right, again with the Bismithet. It's a material that is simultaneously ferroelectric and magnetic, where the two properties talk to each other, where you can control one with the other. No other readily available material sits at the intersection of diamagnetism, topological insulator behavior, high K-dialectrics, electric properties and multiferoic coupling simultaneously. But Bismuth does. And a theoretical, stable version of Element 115 might do all of those things on steroids. Bismuth sits right at the edge of where relativistic electron behavior begins to dominate everything. By the time you get to Muscovium,
Starting point is 03:11:16 you might have full-fledged space-time engineering. And then what's really interesting is Gary Nolan has this magnesium Bismuth piece in his lab. Stanford. You'd need some sort of motive to, you know, with certain cases, heavier elements create isotope ratios that you just don't find. It doesn't make any sense. And then it also, the thing was found alongside an observed anomaly in the sky and a crash. And it was like in the 50s or 60s, like one of which was literally a beach in Brazil, Ubutuba. And the similarity between Brown and Bueller's anti-gravity and Lazars' sports model don't stop there.
Starting point is 03:11:57 Brown would use DC pulsing and, like, you know, kind of high climb rates of the voltage, so the voltage would, there'd be a steep climb rate where it would, you know, increase very, very sharply. The microseising waveguides for terrahertz, you could have very high frequency, you know, energy going into the craft.
Starting point is 03:12:15 Yeah, there's something about Bismuth, I think, that's... Yes. That, yeah, that's undiscovered. Yes. And so much that we're unable to do because it's at the limit, you know, of our technology. Bismuth at S4. Bismuth in Townsend Brown's experiments.
Starting point is 03:12:35 Bismuth's properties in Ning Lee's Gravito Magnetic Theory. Bismith as an ideal hull material for a UFO exactly like the one Lazar described. Bismith in the UFO samples that Stanford Professor Gary Nolan is analyzing right now. The preponderance of evidence now and the Department of Defense admitting that these things are real. The data is real. There's no conclusions. Yeah. The data is real.
Starting point is 03:13:11 There's so much more than there was 40 years ago. Yeah. I mean, all these guys are at the cunning edge. All my information is so old and probably outdated. So who knows how the craft operate now or what kind of craft they're using. Or if they're even manned. So I think everything I know is outdated. It's just interesting to look back at.
Starting point is 03:13:34 I don't take any money from this stuff. And as far as attention, I hate fucking attention. I don't like being on shows. I just want to kind of hide in the corner and do my own thing. So I got enough hugs when I was a kid. And do you feel like you've, you know, on the first Rogan episode, you had migraines. Do you feel like you've suffered,
Starting point is 03:14:00 like your anxiety levels are higher than they would be having that? Yeah, I've had five heart attacks since I was on the Hoke Rogan's, and my arteries are clear. It's all stress. I'm sorry, man. I just had shingles all through my face.
Starting point is 03:14:18 I almost made me go blind. Again, was from stress. It's, yeah, this shit just wears you down over time. I hope you know, you're loved and appreciated and you should be able to just zone out the world with where you're at in life right now and just enjoy the fruits of this, you know, amazing. That would be cool. I am so hoping to be able to retire at some point where I don't have to deal with insane customers or, yeah, I could just sit at home and read books like this.
Starting point is 03:14:50 I think that time is very, very soon. And I think it's the best use of your brain power, too, because I'd actually like to get back into this stuff. That'd be amazing. Well, I'll send you interesting people. Okay. Yeah, well, I'll consume everything you can send. I love it. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 03:15:09 To be careful what you wish for. Well, Bob Luigi, this was a total honor. And you should be so proud because I know you were into this stuff. I feel very lucky when people say like, oh, like you should feel. vindicated they'll say that to me and I'm like what the fuck are you talking i was like i got very lucky with the timing of like when i got into this stuff but truly i speak to you and i'm like oh my god like there are people like yourself who have been into this stuff for decades in a totally thinkless way like not only thinkless but less than thank less than thinkless ostracized
Starting point is 03:15:50 exiled laughed at constantly and so to anybody out there saying Luigi's cashing in on a, you know, a movie or something like that, fuck off. Like, you don't know what you're talking about. It's, it's poetic justice and karma that you made this movie, truly. So I want you to know that. I appreciate that. Yeah, man. Did you ever think that we'd be here now that, like, we'd be, you know, on our podcast,
Starting point is 03:16:19 watching you on Joe Rogan with Bob yesterday? When you guys were talking, I was reading a message from my sister, Veronica, who's been, it's hard for me to see it that way because you can't imagine everything that happened. And for me to get it from her is like the biggest success because I put her in danger because of this. And I didn't know if it was going to work. I still don't know where it's going, but we just went for it,
Starting point is 03:17:04 knowing that, you know, all the past, there's a lot of negative associated to it. And I'm so proud of the team. I'm proud of Chris Mato, that's like my right hand and all. It wouldn't exist if it wasn't for Chris. It wouldn't exist if it wasn't for Veronica. It wouldn't exist if it wasn't for Emily that was at the office taking care of everything. We all know who that is.
Starting point is 03:17:30 It wouldn't exist for Vanessa to be doing all this minutiae work online and finding all. We wouldn't have found the Ed Teller tape if it wasn't for Vanessa. And this was scary. This is frightening. This project depleted your company to zero. To zero.
Starting point is 03:17:47 And we were attacked. Nobody knows this, but we were attacked. ferociously for over a year and a half. Yeah. And we're, I know the full story and we probably can't get too into the weeds, but I'll just say high level, there was some really crazy, scary fuckery that occurred with you on an institutional, like, debanking level kind of thing. Big time.
Starting point is 03:18:14 Where it's like, what sort of power do these people have as far as the antibodies, you know, going against you? And unbelievable stuff. Yeah. Stuff that all the, if you say it, it sounds so crazy that you don't want to say it because people won't. Yeah, they're like, give me a break. Come on. Yeah.
Starting point is 03:18:35 Have you experienced that your whole life? Have you experienced like little things like that? Yeah. But I didn't expect this to happen to Luigi. Yeah. Not coming from those people. Yeah. Getting, you know, or demanding Luigi, we want all.
Starting point is 03:18:50 your communications with Bob Lazard. Yeah. On a court document. On a court document. Yeah, we weren't. What the hell are you talking about? Yeah. Have you ever gotten something like, sir, we can't accept your payment here?
Starting point is 03:19:02 You're like, what? Anything like that? It's a little weird. What do you mean? We can't accept. Like something like that, you know, something like there's something going on in the background of some routine thing you're trying to do. Go to a bank.
Starting point is 03:19:15 You go to, you know, a store or something. We don't want to deal with you. We don't want to deal with you. And you're like, why? Yeah, I mean, that has, that was a long time ago, a couple things like that happened decades ago. Do you remember? Nothing now. I don't remember specifically.
Starting point is 03:19:30 But people kind of messing with you. But yeah, on an official level, you're radioactive. We don't want to deal with you. That's tough, man. Well, you found the one gig you could get, which is selling a lot of this crazy stuff to, it's cool. Well, this has been such an honor. I really appreciate you both. And, um...
Starting point is 03:19:51 It's always fun coming. It's always fun, Jesse. It's always great, man. Okay, so there are orange-reddish UFOs that have been flying around Area 51 since the 80s and 90s that wobble like they're on a wave at low altitudes. The sports model UFO Bob worked on might use principles similar to documented anti-gravity research and crafts of non-human origin are being recovered at the bottom of our oceans all over the world by the Navy.
Starting point is 03:20:21 Bob Lazar will either be forgotten entirely by history, as he predicts, or as I predict, he'll be heralded as a canary in the coal mine, the forerunner in a stampede of revolutionary new science. Whether you believe or disbelieve his story, it should be treated as a puzzle, with very real truths underlying it meant to be discovered by those who take the initiative. So if you think there's something to any of this, don't let it. up. As the first man on the moon, Neil Armstrong once cryptically said, There are great ideas undiscovered. Breakthroughs available to those who can remove one of truth's protective layers, layers. If you're still watching and you made it through all of the
Starting point is 03:21:18 exotic UFO science, you're one of the first to hear about this. We just dropped a new limited merch collection. Two T's, one off white, one vintage black, plus hat. The design has a timeless retro future feel. You can wear it every day. If you've been watching the show lately, you've probably already seen me wearing it. This is a limited run, so when it's gone, it's gone. Head to Americanalchemymerch.com to grab the believe drop today. And while you're there, the cowboy UFOT is a fan favorite we always keep in stock, along with the Atomic Age design. Thank you all so much for following and supporting the show. Thank you.

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