The Joe Rogan Experience - #1029 - Tom DeLonge
Episode Date: October 26, 2017Tom DeLonge is a musician, singer, songwriter, record producer, entrepreneur, and film producer. Get more info about To The Stars Academy and read the Offering Circular at https://dpo.tothestarsacadem...y.com/#offering-circular
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I like the Art Bell build-up because so...
Everybody likes the Art Bell build-up.
The Art Bell sound, you know.
What did he say?
From the kingdom of Nye.
Nye, yeah.
Right.
Pahrump, Nevada.
I used to always love Art Bell because someone would call in and say,
I'm a werewolf.
Yes.
And he would go, oh my.
Interesting.
Tell me more.
Yeah, yeah.
He didn't care.
He never called you out on it.
He just let you ramble.
He had traveler lines.
Loved that.
We love people.
Loved it.
I never learned anything from it, though.
So you're obsessed with UFOs, right?
Is that safe to say?
It's safe to say, but it's not so much just the UFO itself.
I mean, I don't call them that anymore.
We call these advanced aerial threats.
They're different.
Threats?
You honed in on a word we weren't supposed to really get into here in the first part of the show.
Did you have a plan?
I have a very long plan, detailed plan.
We're going to start with my body.
We're just going to talk about my body for a lot.
Okay, what do you want to talk about in terms of your body?
Well, my body is interesting.
It's unique.
Okay.
And it changes shape.
What I've noticed is it's just changing.
Yeah, it's getting larger.
Larger, getting wider.
Depending upon what you put in it.
But you're all, can I cuss?
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
We're on the internet.
You're so fucking fit.
You shook my hand, I think you're going to break my hand.
I'm sorry.
Yeah, just don't be strong. I didn't mean to. Don't be so handsome and strong. I'm just shaking your hand. I think it'll break my hand. I'm sorry. Yeah, just don't be strong I didn't mean to don't be so handsome. Just shaking your hand. Just
Handshake I know well, it's one of those power moves you ever see when Trump shakes people's hands and he pulls them in
He's like yeah, he does do weird shit weird shit like that. Yeah. Yeah, I didn't mean to do that
Just meant to shake your hand like a man. Well, I I took it as like know your place motherfucker. Oh, this is my show
I didn't think that.
No, I'm just joking.
So when did you get obsessed with this aerial threat thing?
Why do you call them threats?
We'll get into that, I guess.
But I got into it when I was in junior high.
For some weird reason, I had like some time off and I went to the school library in seventh grade.
And I was like, damn, I'm going to read some boring shit.
What am I going to read?
And I saw this one book and it had a picture of the Loch Ness Monster in a UFO.
I'm like, that looks cool.
And I read that and I was like, holy cow, these are real.
It wasn't all science fiction.
I mean, the way the book was laid out, I was like, these are real events.
There's no way, really.
And then when the band started doing its thing in the back of the
van, there were no like smartphones. So I was, we're buying books and, um, and I would just lay
there. We'd have like 20 hour drives. And, and so I started buying books on the UFO phenomenon. And
I was, once you do that, it's a black hole. You're done. Yeah. It's definitely a rabbit hole. You
get sucked into it. I, uh, at my house, I have a frame poster. That's the cover of the Roswell daily news that shows the
day after the Roswell crash, where it says that the air force came and recovered the wreckage.
And you know, the whole deal, I've been obsessed with this shit since I was a little kid. Yeah.
Uh, I think, I think that's, uh, I think that's by design.
I think that this generation was meant to have this stuff come out.
But, you know, I can't prove that.
That's just my feeling.
What makes you feel that?
Because of exactly what you said.
There's a lot of people.
I don't believe that some of the events happened on accident.
I think that there's been a lot of events that are on purpose.
Some have been for show.
Some have been for – I mean, there's a variety of reasons.
But I think a lot of it is a control system that's really pushing humanity in a very specific direction.
So like they've got a time frame where they've had these events take place.
Is that what you think?
Yeah.
And they also time travel, which is different than what people think in like a movie where
they sit in a machine and you're in the 1930s and you've got to go save humanity.
When you use the technology, there's a time difference between what they're doing inside of an artificially
created bubble of gravity of sorts
and then what's on the outside.
So if you're on the inside of one of those machines,
everything would be skewed
more black and white. There would be like a red
shift and everybody would look
frozen. So you literally
could fly around and grab a Coke out of
someone's hand and put it in someone else's hand.
Where are you getting this from? Well, take a wild guess. Look at the people I'm
surrounded by, you know? So the, so the people you're surrounded by are telling you this,
is that what it is? Uh, well, I, I don't want to get into that, but the people I'm surrounded with,
um, and myself, uh, you know, are, are very close to this stuff, but the, the physics, you know, the physicist that's a co-founder of my company, To The Star, he's a Nobel nominee.
He wrote the book on plasma physics.
What's his name?
Hal Puthoff, Dr. Hal Puthoff.
And he created remote viewing.
Do you know what remote viewing is?
Yeah.
He's the creator of the CIA psychic spy program, but he also has done like really exotic advanced forefront propulsion
work for the past decades and decades, actually.
I mean, he's deep into the like quantum this and that.
So he's the one that actually told me about the redshift.
Yeah.
And so they have experienced this physically or is this just theoretical or they know that it exists?
The technology?
Yes.
I believe that the technology not only exists, we've figured out how to play with it.
But I'm not going to really get into that here.
That is what we're doing at my company, though.
That is the announcement.
So Steve Justice was head of advanced programs at the Skunk Works.
And the Skunk Works are who built the famous secret bases you hear about.
Skunk Works did the U-2 spy plane, the SR-71 Blackbird, the F-117 stealth fighter.
It's all Groom Lake out there.
All that kind of stuff.
And he literally was in charge of all the advanced programs.
So, you know, you've got the boss and you've got him.
And he came – he just finished his career over there within the past two months, I think it is.
And he was on stage with me when we came out and said we're going to be building one of these things.
Instead, we're going to be building one of these things.
So when you say that all this technology exists, have they explained this to you or have you seen it physically?
Oh, I haven't seen anything physically like that.
I wouldn't be allowed to go anywhere if that does or doesn't exist.
So they've just explained to you that this exists and that this is in the hands of the U.S. government? I think no.
No, I see. I don't want to get into that kind of stuff. But um, if you don't mind
But why is it that you want to not get into certain things? Well, I don't want to speak
You know, I represent more than myself these days, right?
So I definitely have to watch what I say
Who do you represent when you say represent more than yourself the team that I'm with so when you look at the people that are
A part of my company. It's under secretary of defenses and defense and senior intelligence service. Is there a list of these people like
that we could see? Oh yeah. I thought you guys would have had that. Yeah. But I mean,
is there like a list where folks could see it online? Oh yeah. They can go to, um,
to the stars academy.com and scroll down and you'll be able to see who they all are. So,
so how did you get linked up with all these people?
That story might be a better way to start
because a lot of people don't know this part of the story.
And I think you're going to find it pretty fucking odd as well.
But okay, so we'll back up a couple of years.
So I was obviously, you know, I started the band Blink
and Blink went places.
But we always had a weird band relationship,
like most bands. And we also thought that we would never be big. So we started companies on the side.
And I had a company that incubated a lot of small startups, like software and apparel and
hardcore skate surf companies and stuff like that. Well, I learned a lot from that. And I pulled out
an entertainment startup called to the stars.
And I knew I was going to be doing kind of like science fiction franchised stories, just like
Disney, but science fiction for adults. And what that means is, you know, I make a story, I title
it, I brand it, and I put out the book, and I put out the merchandise, and I go make a movie, you
know, and it's, it's a vertically integrated kind of model. Well, one of the stories I knew I wanted to put out was secret machines, which was
kind of a historical fiction. Um, but based on real events about the UFO phenomenon,
but I also knew that I knew shit that most people don't know because I've studied it for so long.
And I happened to put some pieces together that most people don't put together.
So before I came out with that book and before I came out with the plan to take that, make major motion pictures and all that kind of stuff, I knew I needed to ask permission.
So I flew around to places, I can't say who they were, but they listened to my pitch.
And then I got an email out of nowhere that says,
meet us next to the Pentagon at this day and time.
And I did that.
You got an email from just a random person?
No, no, no.
I just can't tell you who it was from.
Okay.
And so then I go out.
Meet you next to the Pentagon?
So you just flew to the Pentagon?
I flew out to Pentagon City. Yeah, yeah. Were you gets freaking out i'll tell you when i started freaking out there's more
shit it gets way worse this is nothing um so that started me out and uh out near dc taking some
other high level meetings and there's somebody um at a very high level that that uh closed the
door looked me in the eye and says okay I'm going to introduce you to somebody.
And that person comes to San Diego,
puts me on the phone with a general.
And the general is listening to my little stump speech about what I want to do with this franchise.
Because I definitely didn't want to, you know,
I wasn't looking to like force disclosure
and I wasn't looking to be rogue and break secrets.
I was like, look, I know what's going on here.
And you guys are doing a kick-ass job. And I would have done the exact same thing should I have been the guy at the top that had to make some really hardcore decisions
70 years ago. So I'm, I want to support you. I think people are cynical because there's a vacuum.
You guys can't say what you're doing. So all these people are just coming up with a bunch of
bullshit to say, oh, you know, they don't want us to know or we can't handle it or it's all about oil and money and all this weird shit.
But you would put these pieces together independently.
I did.
Based on books that you read?
Yeah.
People think, you know, people think that like places like the CIA and the DIA, all these intelligence organizations have, you know, a monopoly on information. They
don't, they get their information from the real world too. You know, they do have access to,
to, you know, archives of information. They do have access to some amazing, you know,
satellite data and stuff like that. But if you're smart and you take your time, you know where to
look and you find patterns, you can pretty much put together all the same shit they can, kind of, you know.
And that's what I did.
And so when I pitched what I wanted to do, he said, come up and meet me tomorrow.
And so I flew up to NASA, actually, NASA Ames, and had a two-hour meeting there.
And after two hours, that person says, he looks me in the eyes,
I'm going to introduce you to someone else. And after two hours, that person says, he looks me in the eyes, I'm going to introduce you
to someone else. And he did. And so I got on the phone with this person. And this person, you know,
go, I'm a skeptic, I'm a skeptic. And then at the end of the conversation, he goes, he goes,
fly out and see me. And so I did. And that's when things really started happening. So I'm now I fly
out to this airport. and I sit at a table
in a restaurant at the airport. No one's in there. And this gentleman sits down and the waiter comes
up. He waves off the waiter and he looks me in the eye and says, it was the Cold War and we found a
life form. And that's when I started shitting my pants because I know a lot about this stuff, but
you always wait to talk to somebody that is is is one of the inside people you always
want to have so he sits down at a restaurant with you at the airport and tells you that they found
a life form yes and during the cold war during the cold war and everything that they did and
every decision they made at the time was because of the consciousness of the cold war why is this
guy decided to meet with you at an airport because Because the only way you meet with these people,
the only way you ever would have anyone talk to you
is if you can provide a service that they need.
And my service was pretty interesting to them
because I said, look, you guys, you know,
you struggle with saying disclosure.
You want to tell everybody everything,
which I don't think everyone should know everything.
And then you say they can't handle it.
So don't tell them anything, you know, and I'm like, there's,
there's a middle road there and here's the way I would do the middle road.
And it resonated with them, you know?
And so we had a pretty epic conversation for like two hours.
Why you like, why, what is it about what your message was?
Because your idea was that made them want to tell you some top secret shit that
they've tried to keep away from the american people when you take a guy who's like a big
celebrity who's in a huge rock band like you and you just say hey meet me in an airport i'm going
to tell you about a life form that we found during the cold war because you're famous or because you
know things no because i have a service so it's, it sounds easy when you play it like that, but it was a service, like what
can you do for them that they need help with and what could you do?
Communication.
They don't have a way to make a movie, a book.
They don't know how they don't have a way to make documentaries.
They don't have a way to go on, on a big show like this and communicate with young people.
They don't do that.
And nor should they, they're, they look at You've got to look at what they're doing.
So they look to you for a spokesperson role?
I wouldn't say spokesperson role.
Communication role?
A communication role.
It makes more sense.
So they would give some information to you,
and you would get it out to people.
And now why wouldn't they do it themselves?
Because they wouldn't have the same platform
or access to the same platform that you would have?
And the other reason is people have tried to do movies and stuff like this uh but none of them
know i was fortunate enough to to know the core story and most people don't explain that then if
you don't mind going back like you said you were able to put things together that other people
weren't what are those things um essentially it's Secret Machines, where you have a lot of private finance.
You have some world bankers, and you have a lot of people internationally working together to figure out a plan of how to push back against something that's been coming here for a very long time.
But using off-the-books finances and using mechanisms that we're not totally aware exist.
And what people have to realize is the UFO phenomenon isn't a phenomenon.
The universe is fucking gigantic, and there's life everywhere, every fucking where.
And there's a lot of life that's way more advanced than we are. And just like Voyager left our solar system, a little dinky satellite from the 70s there. And just like my company is going to be building, you know, this this electromagnetic craft that really can do the same thing to time that I've been telling you about, other civilizations have that too, which means you can traverse those distances of space.
And what you have to think about is what happened when we first discovered that and what did
we do about it?
And there's no, you know, you got to look at 47 in a very peculiar way.
90 days after the Roswell event with CIA was created, the Air Force was separated from
the Army, the National Security Act was created.
And all those things are mechanisms to start learning more and to start getting private industry off the ground.
So that had nothing to do with World War II.
You think it had to do with aliens?
Oh, I absolutely think it.
Well, both because what I believe crashed at Roswell was – I believe it was German from Argentina.
But it had hallmarks and technology based on alien technology.
So we put out a story saying it's alien.
And then we put out a story saying it's a weather balloon.
But the real thing it was, we didn't want anyone to guess.
And that's why we put those two things out there.
And that's kind of how they do it.
I think they did that with the moon.
It's like, you know, we went to the moon and then, uh, they put out this meme kind of thing. Like we can't, we, we didn't go to the
moon, but I didn't want people really going, well, what's on the moon that, you know, so these things
are managed until they can figure it out because you've got a bunch of normal dudes in suits
sitting at a big table like this and it's their fucking responsibility to figure this thing out.
and it's their fucking responsibility to figure this thing out.
And this shit is monumentally big.
So how have they managed this then?
These regular dudes without access to communication like you have, how have they managed to disseminate this information and sort of confuse everybody?
I think, well, I can tell, I don't know how they did it.
I do know that they infiltrated UFO groups.
That was the very first thing they did in the 50s.
Sort of like how FBI agents and undercover cops infiltrated Occupy Wall Street and pretended to be radical hippies and started fights.
Yep, they did that.
They get access to what the civilians are learning, how information transfers from one group to another.
And then they start deflecting all their knowledge and putting in leaks and this and that and
getting them off the main track, not because of a disdain for citizens and not because
of any other reason than picture ISIS.
We don't know what ISIS is.
They got a nuclear bomb and we caught a guy trying to sneak in this bomb.
Are they going to stop and come sit on your
couch and tell you all about it? No. And if you're like on the radio and there's all these people
going, oh my God, we're going to die, a bomb, a bomb, a bomb. They're hold up a second. You know,
you're not going to fucking die, but we need to learn more about this and we got to figure it out
before we sit down and talk to you about it. So what was the connection though,
specifically that you had figured out that they knew that you had figured out, that other people hadn't put together?
Well, let me just – okay, so let me go back to my story.
So I put out this book, and this book deals with –
What was the book called again?
Secret Machines.
And it deals with secret – you know, international finance, private industry, a secret space program, and a bunch of other things.
And how'd you research this book?
What do you mean?
How'd you get the information?
I was just 25 years of reading shit and watching videos and studying physics and studying,
you know, the secrecy acts and all that kind of weird shit.
You know, you put it together and a lot of it's bad information.
But after a long time i
realized i just realized what was going on there i just i studied enough of international finance
some mechanisms that happened after world war ii what the nazis were doing technologically
that no one really talks about to this day they were 100 years ahead of us
about what their guys did at the end of the war in South America. That's in the paperclip. Paperclip was like, there's two
levels of paperclip. Paperclip is the operation that brought over all these ex-Nazis into NASA
and into all of our aerospace programs. Why did we do that? Well, because they knew some shit
that was very important. And we said there might be a bigger issue out there to deal with,
so why don't we side with the devil or side with someone bad
because there might be a devil out there.
It's that kind of thinking.
So they come in.
I thought it was about competing with Russia to try to advance rocketry.
I believe that there was, you know,
I believe that there's a reason why the Cold War never got hot is because we're working with Russia on this specific issue.
You think the reason why the Cold War never turned into an actual war?
So you're saying?
Yeah.
So it had nothing to do with the fact that Russia was a communist empire and essentially spent them and they really went under and collapsed.
Yeah.
But there's different there's different levels.
It's like when someone goes, you know, the U S government did this.
Well, what do you mean?
What does that mean?
Does that mean the CIA did it or the DOD did it or Homeland Security did it?
You're dealing with the, it's a trillion dollar organization.
It's like if somebody in Apple leaks an iPhone, you know, are you going to say, oh my God,
Apple is doing apple's
like well shit we're a 800 billion dollar company we have so many things going on worldwide it's
impossible to say the entire organization believes one thing and the government's the same kind of
the same kind of way it's just like that's just a word the u.s government's two words right
three year three words how do we want to count this? United States government. Okay.
Three.
Okay.
U.S.
You got a calculator?
I'm going to figure this shit out.
And you have many, many layers of what's going on.
Of course.
You have some people worried on technology, some people worrying about what's happening to the civilian population. You have some people worrying about how to keep everything afloat, how to keep everything going.
And you have a whole bunch of weird military excursions and they're bumping into each other.
And all these people aren't read in to what's going on with the UFO thing.
So as all that shit.
So who gets read in?
That's a good question.
If I had to guess, very, very senior technical brass.
And rock stars.
I wasn't read in.
Trust me.
They didn't tell you anything?
No, they possibly did. But I wasn't read in. Trust me. They didn't tell you anything? No. They possibly did, but I wasn't read in, read in.
I wasn't brought into a skiff and they said, this is what's going on, even though I've been in a skiff a few times.
Okay.
Do you know what a skiff is?
A boat?
A skiff is a special compartmentalized information facility.
Oh, okay.
It's where top secret shit can be discussed.
Oh, I thought maybe they talk on boats because nobody can hear you.
They do that, too.
Just got there in the middle of a rowboat.
They do that.
They do that.
They actually do, because you can sweep for bugs on boats a lot easier than you can on
a building.
Makes sense.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So they tell you what?
Okay, so I'm sitting at that restaurant and-
It says he found a life form, where they found a life form during the Cold War. Right. And I'm sitting at that restaurant. It says he found a life form.
They found a life form during the Cold War.
Right.
And I said-
Where'd they find it?
Oh, I didn't ask him that question.
Really?
Many places.
I did one time bring up, I said, I'm thinking about talking about the crash in the late
40s.
And they go, why just that one?
That was the answer.
So I had to figure out a language to talk to these guys.
Did you ever think maybe this guy's bullshitting you?
Or he's a crazy person?
Oh, fuck no.
No?
That's why you've got to hear the whole story.
Okay.
Okay, so I'm sitting with them.
We talk about a lot of things.
I bring up the incidents with our nuclear weapons. I bring up the incidences, a few other things that I want to get into.
And he goes, what do you need to do your project?
What are you looking for?
And I said, well, I need advisors.
And he goes, what do you need to do your project?
What are you looking for?
And I said, well, I need advisors.
You know, I need people that are from different areas in the government because everyone has their own perspective.
You know, you have people at the National Reconnaissance Office that have a perspective based on the satellite feeds they're getting.
And these things are coming in and out of the atmosphere. Then you also have people from the agency that are worried about and collecting information of what's going on with people in different countries and here.
But then you also have, you know, engineers that have a perspective on how the technology is made and what that might mean, because there's a lot of consciousness stuff that falls in this category.
Can I stop you right there? So there's satellites that track them coming in and out of the atmosphere?
Absolutely. Yeah, absolutely.
What kind of satellites are these? Uh, how would I, fuck, I don't know. Usually forward looking infrared,
but I don't know what spectrum of the infrared they're looking at. So there's some sort of a
camera or some sort of a detection device that they have in the atmosphere just to check for UFOs?
I don't know if it's just for UFOs. They can pick up very, very
specific heat signatures and they have algorithms because what you have is a satellite is a device
that can pick up what you program it to pick up. Now, you put a sensor on there, but you got to
tell the sensor what to do. So if the sensor says, look, something traveling at this speed
with this kind of heat,
you know, you got to record that, you got to focus on it. And that's what we call an ICBM.
But if something comes in and zigzag stops and turns left and it's traveling 10 times faster
than that, we need you to record that and focus in on that as well. But if something just is moving
low and it's only going 300 miles an hour and it has these big wings and a low whatever,
that's just a plane, you know. So what it captures is based on you know how it's programmed in the first place but so it
can differentiate between meteorites and absolutely yes absolutely so so how often are these things
coming into our atmosphere oh shit i don't know but i i've had quite a few discussions um one of
the people i i've been i've been in contact – one of my advisors was from the National Reconnaissance Office, high up, high, high up.
And they call it episodic visits.
That's all I know.
Episodic, meaning like they have time periods where they like –
There was – I saw a paper where they –
Semesters. I figured out, the Department of Defense figured out, a physicist there, an algorithm of how to compute when the things fly in and collect smaller ships, like motherships, small ships, at what longitude and latitude and essentially what orbit it would land at when it would collect these other machines.
And so they tested that.
And all I know is it was successful.
So you think this is happening on a very frequent basis? other machines. And so they tested that. And then all I know is it was successful.
So you think this is happening on a very frequent basis?
Well, let me tell you the rest of the story. So I, and this is, it's important because you'll see.
So he goes, what do you need? I said, I need advisors. And then, so next thing you know,
I leave and two weeks later, bam, bam, bam, my email starts. I have all these admirals,
all these generals, no, no intelligence people No intelligence people other than brass that were connected with the National Reconnaissance Office.
But National Reconnaissance Office is half Air Force and half CIA.
But they're all military.
And so I start talking to them.
I start meeting with them. I fly out to Colorado Springs.
And there's a general and a colonel and they look at
me and they said, they said, okay, do you need anything else? Are you good? And I said, well,
I think you guys should talk to the defense intelligence agency. And they go, why?
I'm all, I just don't want to upset them. I want to make sure everyone's kosher with what I'm about
to do. And the colonel looks at me and he goes, do you ask your dad for permission after your mom's
already given it to you? And I go, no. And he's all, you've been given permission, shut the fuck up and get to work. And
I was like, all right. So I did. So I go out and I put the book out there and I started doing
national radio, like the art bill. So coast to coast, or I do all that stuff. Next thing you
know, I get approached by somebody with a, at a certain agency. And that guy comes to San Diego and puts me in a small room. And I got what you would call interrogated for two days straight saying, we need to know who the fuck you are.
You know shit you shouldn't know.
Like what specifically should you not have known?
The book.
What's in the book.
The book, what's in the book, everything I've been telling you today when you're dealing with – there is a concerted international effort to deal with this stuff and that was in my book.
And that is – it's not like Roswell crashed and it was not like – like all the typical UFO shit that people dwell on isn't the story. It's just that something crashed or someone saw someone saw, got abducted and saw this, or someone pulled a little piece of metal out of their body, but no
one's put together what we're doing about it. Cause our, our, our countrymen since world war
two aren't stupid. What set them off though? Like what was the thing that you said that you should
not have known? The, uh, in my book, it is my belief, uh belief that we have an incredible we've made
incredible strides creating assets to deal with this stuff that's that's my
belief and I'm not speaking for my company this just assets yeah means some
sort of a government agency that's been designed or put together?
International.
Okay.
So some sort of an international collaboration to deal with the threat of alien life.
And that was enough that they pulled you aside and wouldn't let you go for two days and just interrogated you?
So it was an interrogation, but it was a pretty heavy debriefing of how I got to where I was.
And it's not like they didn't let me go home this took place at a hotel near my home but they made you sit down
and talk to them oh fuck yeah i had there was uh six of them i think six and so they let you leave
and go to sleep and then come back get something yeah and came back spent another eight hours
because i wasn't rogue i wasn't like trying to hide anything i was trying to explain to them how
did you have all this free time though?
What do you mean?
I mean, have you ever like, if somebody said, hey, we're going to have you in a room, we're
going to talk to you for two days.
I'm like, dude, I don't have two days.
Well, that's, that's, well, that's maybe you don't.
But if you do, I fuck yeah.
When you have these people that want to get ahold of you, you don't run.
I'm not saying run.
I'm saying like, what are you guys looking for?
Like they're going to just sit you down and ask you questions for two days because you put together this idea that somehow or another there's some sort of an international collaboration to deal with the threat of alien life.
No, they looked at it.
They didn't know.
They thought I was Ed Snowden.
They thought I was – they thought there was a group of people leaking me classified information.
They didn't know that you're from Blink-182?
They didn't know that you're like a huge rock star? They don't care about that. That's what they don't understand. They don't know that you're from Blink-182? They didn't know that you're like a huge rock star?
That's what they don't understand.
They don't care about who I am.
They just care about the material.
Right, but it should take them like three seconds to realize like you're not Edward
Snowden.
You're a rock star.
But I'm saying some pretty provocative shit.
You got to realize no one else has gone up there and talked about, you know, once again, I, I'm in a tricky spot
right now because a lot of what happened back then, you know, I can't really get into now
because of the positions and the things I'm involved with, but read the book.
And so it's just because you printed the stuff in the book that they wanted to pull you aside
and talk to you about this for two days. And I was all over radio and talking about it. And I was saying some other crazy shit that I
can't repeat. So people listening, if they want to go back and look at those interviews,
that's a better way to. Okay. So you had said something in those interviews that you can't
say again because they told you to stop talking about it. Absolutely. Yeah. They tell you to stop
talking about the fact that you can't talk about it. No, I mean, I don't think that's the issue.
They, the, the more of the issue was, what are you trying to achieve?
Right.
And once they found out who I was working with, they were like, holy shit.
And they only found that out when WikiLeaks broke into John Podesta's emails.
And I was having video conferences and conference calls with – he was Obama's senior advisor at the time.
So the Wall Street Journal
broke the story. Like, what's this rock star talking about UFOs with Hillary Clinton's campaign
manager? No, he was Obama's senior advisor. So it had nothing to do with Hillary, you know,
so we were setting these up. And when that broke, I had to call up my partner from the CIA. And I
said, you know, I, I gotta say, I know I got, now I can talk to you a little bit
more about who these people are. And, um, and that's where I gained, um, a really large amount
of credibility with them, but also where they realized, um, that we got to figure out a better
way to do this. And what you see is me and some very important people coming together to do something that I think is really beneficial to society.
But we have a lot of work to do because a lot of people, they don't know what to think of it.
At first, they thought I was nuts when I was talking about my book.
I'm all, I got these advisors.
And then all of a sudden, the Wall Street Journal broke this story.
And there's all these multi-star generals and head of some really big aerospace companies.
And then the big news organizations were like, holy shit, this might be real.
A lot of kids still don't know and they're having fun on the internet.
And then I came out a couple of weeks ago on stage with all these people.
And now it's like now all the big, huge, I'm dealing with some crazy big mainstream press that we're trying to keep at bay for a variety of reasons.
But, yes, it's all true.
And what To the Stars is really after is how do we bring the public in on this
and work together to communicate and educate this stuff?
How do we bring the technology out of the shadows and build it for the world?
we bring the technology out of the shadows and build it for the world? And how do we, you know,
tell the story in documentaries, nonfiction, fictional works over a period of years?
And if we do that, the public owns it. The public has a say. They're a part of it.
And then people will start to understand over time why they did what they did.
They didn't lie to people just out of like ego. it's it's they were like okay there's this group called isis and they're here and we need to understand them and we need to fucking figure it
out quick uh but the problem is these are extraordinarily advanced civilizations that
have been coming here forever that's why it's all in all the ancient fucking scripts and texts and
carved into rocks and all that shit.
But trying to figure it out, trying to connect the dots and trying to, I mean, looking at debris that they probably still have in a warehouse and we have no fucking clue how
to make this or back engineer this stuff.
I mean, there's a piece of metal from a crash that I've seen and I've seen the science on it. And it's, it's so it's atomically
aligned and it's layered and multiple, like 80 layers within just a few microns of purities of
metal that, that aren't even in our solar system. And they think it needs to be made in an area
where there's no gravity. So number one, it has to be made in space. Number two, even if we were to create a machine that can potentially do some of this stuff, 3D printing layers of different metals of obscene purities, it would cost hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars.
We don't even have that.
Why do you think it was made without gravity?
Because I think it's the atomic structure.
So what happens is when you radiate it with terahertz, it loses mass. Something weird. It resonates
some kind of harmonic and then it gets lighter. And if you hit it with enough terahertz, it'll
float. So we're going to be showing people this stuff. We're going to be bringing out
the hardware. Some of the hardware going to be bringing out implants. We're going to be
bringing out videos. We're going to be bringing out some other stuff. So you're going to be
showing people this actual physical piece of metal that was constructed in a zero-gravity
Environment in space and if you hit it with enough energy it becomes weightless. I wouldn't say weightless
I don't know if we can make enough energy to do that
But yes, that is our plan and not only and show the experiment so okay
Well if you can't give it enough energy to make it weightless,
can you give it enough energy to reduce the mass
so it weighs less?
Yes.
And you can prove this?
Yes, and that's why...
So you can have a scale,
and you can put this piece of metal on a scale.
I'll do you better.
It's not even that.
It's warping the space-time continuum around the object.
So you shoot...
What you can do is you can shoot an electron over it,
why it's not a
single electron uh-huh and you collect it and time that how do you shoot a single electron if i know
i'm not a physicist they just do this shit that's what they do so and i was actually on a phone call
today about it i talked for about 45 minutes in the car on the way up here about some of some of
the how would they even be able to regulate whether or not they have a single electron well
fuck they're doing crazier shit than that at CERN.
At CERN, they're taking particles of atoms and they're speeding them up to light speed.
Almost light speed.
Yeah, and slamming them into each other.
So I'm not too worried about electrons.
But this is an enormous building that's, I think it's, what is it?
CERN's like 10 miles in the loop.
Yeah, but you've seen an electron microscope, right?
It's like the size of half of this table.
Right, but I'm saying they're launching a single electron at this thing?
I think that's what they do, yeah.
They do that with photons too, by the way.
I read a really cool study about single photons,
and consciousness was interacting with it.
Just by thinking, it was changing the way the photon went.
It's crazy.
So what happens is
is you shoot this electron and you know how fast it is to travel over this piece of metal then you
then you radiate it with terahertz and then what does that mean radiate it with um you're you're
you're electrifying and charging the piece of material you know what it's a terahertz it's it's
a it's a high frequency wave i don't want to pretend i know that much about it i just know that
It's a high-frequency wave.
I don't want to pretend I know that much about it.
I just know that the earlier tests were with radio waves, like RF, and they need to do terahertz.
So I don't know much more than that.
And so by shooting terahertz at it, the piece of metal can lose mass. And then when you shoot an electron over it, it'll be a different time than the other one when it's not turned on.
Does that make sense?
No. The time it takes for an on. Does that make sense? No.
The time it takes for an electron to go over the piece of metal.
What's that, Jamie?
This is why I type in terahertz imaging.
Laser guided codes advance single pixel terahertz imagery.
And this B, the image is sampled upon instructions from a laser.
A, the terahertz light passes through the object.
And then C, the information is collected to reconstruct the image.
Look at that.
So with this stuff.
It's just an imaging technology.
But you're timing how fast it takes an electron to move over the surface of the metal.
Then you charge the metal.
And then you're timing the exact same thing.
And there will be different times.
And the positive result is that it lost mass, so it traveled faster or slower or whatever the hell is supposed to happen.
And so I would imagine that just this piece of metal, if it exists, would be kind of game over.
If you brought this piece of metal to the most advanced scientists in metallurgy or whatever they would be that would understand this kind of shit.
Yeah, and it has been.
It's already been there.
But the problem is, is there anywhere online where people can read about this?
There actually is.
There's some of this stuff, not this piece in particular.
They came out as arts parts on Arts Bell a long time ago.
And there are different layers of business and magnesium.
But this one came from a crash in 48 not the 47 and i know nothing
more about it but i don't think it's anything they're coming here with a chain of custody and
say this came from air force or something like that you know i don't know who has this so you're
going to bring this and and demonstrate this to people yeah and the reason is is because we need
to we're also going to show um videos that just got declassified from
our most advanced systems. I think they call it the Aegis system. It's a radar system and
forward looking infrared of UFOs. I have those in possession actually already. And so we're going to
show the videos that just, I mean, the first time in history, by the way, that videos of UFOs have
been declassified. There's been leaks and there's
been people catching shit on their phones, but I have all the chain of custody, all the documents
and everything. And we just got those a few weeks ago and there's a shitload more coming.
And so we'll release the videos and we'll show the experiment as a proof of concept. So everyone
knows this shit's all real because right now they're just looking at a drawing and they're
looking at this guy from the skunk works, you and just going how the fuck are they going to build a machine that plays
with time and plays with the fabric of space time and so we have to kind of educate people and say
it's possible it's possible yeah that's it there advanced electro gravit
gravitic propulsion is that how you say that electro Electrogravitic. Gravitic. So what that does, what the machine does that we're building is there's an electromagnetic wave that is the foundation of everything, of all mass, of everything.
Some people call it zero-point energy.
Some people call it the vacuum energy.
But like one inch of air could power the united states for like hundreds of years kind of
thing or maybe more so what they got to do is isolate very specific atoms to where all the
noise of all matter and cell phones and everything that's going on on earth can be can be separated
from this one atom and if you can do that with the right material you can get access to that
electromagnetic wave that's powering the atom, the invisible
wave pattern that's under everything of all existence.
And once you do that, it's not like splitting an atom.
This is the power behind the atom.
It's extraordinarily dangerous, but it's also what will turn that thing on and it'll turn
into a ball of light and just disappear.
And I could show you a video of something
doing that. That's actually on YouTube.
Okay, tell Jamie what it is.
Well, I would have to... I could
search it for a second. How about this?
Well, there's no commercial breaks, is there? No.
Well, fuck. Just search it.
Just describe it and then search it.
You know what?
If you type in
Astra...
The TR3B. Astra TR3B.
Astra TR3B.
And I'll walk over there.
Can I walk over there for a second?
Sure, sure.
I'll show them which one it is.
Go ahead.
Is this mic on too?
Yeah.
So we can all talk to each other?
Sort of.
So what you want to do is come down here.
And do your people get to...
They'll be able to see it.
We'll put it up on the screen.
So what this is...
Well, I don't really want to tell you what it is,
but I want you to watch it.
I can't hear it right now.
That's not it.
One more page.
I'll find it for you.
It just takes me a second.
There's a bunch of this shit.
This is the craft, by the way,
that's in... Did you spell it right craft by the way that's in did you spell it right
astro that's why sorry astro astro astro not astro if you're typing it out
we just gotta get we gotta get make sure it's the right one we're looking uh on youtube ladies and
gentlemen if you're in your car right now going, what the fuck is going on in this show?
Most, the vast majority of the people just listen to this show.
So for the people that are just listening and you want to go check it out,
TR38 Astra Aurora Project USAF.
Oh, 3B, sorry.
This is the craft and secret machines book.
That's all I'm going to say.
And this thing is floating in the air
It'll take a few seconds till they turn on the engine
That looks pretty badass. Oh wait you can see little lights dancing around on the bottom
But I think this was leaked on purpose because the guy's making it just hard enough to see
Moving the camera around in and out of focus. Yeah, right like it's got like
He's barely focusing boy that looks like a drone. Well, it looks small too. It's not it's that's pretty big
I would think that one's about 40 feet really look see the tail fins on the back. That's how you know
It's not alien per se it's built off. I think
Technology that came from there but you
know they don't need vertical tail stabilizers that big light okay this is
the engine they turn it on so right now they're at they're accessing that energy
I told you about now and watch what happens it's gone there's a pilot in
that if that was in a movie I'd want my money back why this movie can suck my
dick why why I'm so fake oh you think that yeah well look fake what is that TR I was in a movie. I'd want my money back. Why? I'd like this movie can suck my dick. Why?
Why?
It looks so fake.
Oh, you think that?
Yeah.
It did look fake.
What is that?
TR3B is real?
There's another one?
This is the same one, but these ones are stacked, and that's a drone that came out of one.
That's a drone?
The small one is.
Oh, the little thing that came out the side?
Yeah.
But you can look up Black Triangle UFO and find hundreds of these videos.
So these are people, like civilians, that are getting this from the ground?
They're filming this?
I don't know.
I don't know where this one came from.
Jamie, this is not the same account as the last video?
No, I just started up next because it's probably a highly viewed TR-3B video.
Right.
How many views does this have?
474,000.
Damn.
So many people know now.
There's hundreds of these out there.
Oh, now it separates from the other one?
But everyone thinks it's alien, and that's not my belief.
So you think this is something along the lines of when they had the stealth bomber program
and they were experimenting with these things?
What do you think of Robert Lazar?
Do you think that guy's real?
I'm putting out his autobiography.
So you do think he's legit?
You should read his book.
Oh, yeah, absolutely. Yeah. He's a fascinating character right um he is he is his story's really interesting too um where he really fucked up though so for the people that
don't know that are listening he's a guy that came out he's the reason we know about area 51
um he literally is the is is the guy that broke the story of its existence.
He got brought in for a job.
And during the interviews, they said, we have another idea for you.
And they put him in a place he claims had all these disks.
And he was on a back engineering team as a physicist.
But what happened was they rushed him in there because per his story, they tried to cut into one of the propulsion devices and it exploded and killed a bunch of scientists.
So the Nevada test site, which is the area where Area 51 and all that stuff is, released a statement that they were just doing a small little nuke test.
But it was really because of this thing.
And so they rushed him in there without doing all of his background checks because it takes six months to a year.
And during those background checks, he takes six months to a year. And during those
background checks, he was already working on this stuff. They found that his wife was going a little
haywire because he couldn't tell her what he was doing. And he would leave in the middle of the
night. He'd be gone for a week and she was getting fed up. And so she started having an affair.
And so they're listening in on all the phone calls and checking him out and they're kind of going,
his home life is unstable. So they stopped calling him to come into work while they figure it out. He knows I mean he's working next to a guy with a
Machine gun he knows that that this is no fucking joke. No one knows what he's been doing
He thought he did something wrong
So as the nervous individual he is he runs to the to his friends and says this is what I've been doing
This is what I've been working on. There's alien craft. It's over here at Groom Lake.
And the tests are every Wednesday night at eight o'clock. And his wife goes, holy shit.
And his friend goes, holy shit. And he goes, come on, I'll show you. So they drive three hours
north of Vegas outside on public land and they videotape and watch these UFOs come up and be
tested and dart around and disappear. And he goes, that's the one I'm working on. And it's almost like, well, how did you know what time? Because I'm working on it. Well,
he does this three times. I think it was three times. And on the third time they got caught
because there's, I've been there. There's security that, that travels those mountains.
You always hear about those guys out there in area 51. And when they caught him, they were like,
holy fuck. He's, he's like, what the fuck is he doing? You know, why is he telling everyone?
he's he's like what the fuck is he doing you know why is he telling every so he runs to the news station with george knapp who's another another um he's a host on coast to coast and he tells him
what he's doing and he just goes live on las vegas news and it caught like wildfire fire uh across
the world and so then these guys grabbed him put him in a room put a gun to his head and said when
we told you not to say anything we didn't't mean say everything, you know, and he got really scared.
They started fucking with him.
I was actually in a meeting two nights ago talking about some of the things they did.
One of the things he did, he went to a gym.
He used to he didn't have access to a lot of guns, but for some fucking reason, he had like an Uzi.
It was in his glove compartment.
He goes to a gym and he comes out and his car doors are open.
The glove compartment is open and the Uzi just sitting on his chair. He got shot out on the freeway and they erased a
bunch of his records. And he's still to this day, really nervous about it. He always claimed,
for a while, he claimed he had part of, this is what I will say, he claimed the energy source
was an element that was very heavy. And it was like unepinium or something like that, 115 element.
And 25 years ago, he talked all about it.
And then literally three years ago, maybe four, they added it to the periodic table.
What is this stuff called again?
I think it's called unepinium.
It's element 115.
And that's the other thing.
People don't realize.
Holy shit, 25 years ago,
he says,
this element comes from a binary star system and it's really heavy.
There's a certain isotope that's stable.
They'll find it.
And then all of a sudden I remember one day I was driving my car and I heard it like on CNN,
new element added to the periodic table.
I was like,
holy shit,
you know,
but it's pretty interesting.
Crazy story.
Well,
they erased his,
what was the claim that he, they had erased his educational story. Well, they erased his story. What was the claim? That they had erased his educational record?
Well, I think he might have. People, I don't know if I think this, because I don't even, I don't know.
I never researched it, but people that I know that have researched it think he might have kind of upgraded his resume a little bit.
And maybe he didn't go to MIT.
Right. That was the claim.
But they also said that he really did work for, what's that lab in New Mexico?
Oh, well, Lawrence Livermore and JPL.
JPL.
Yeah, JPL's in Pasadena, yeah.
Well, whatever it was, it was in New Mexico that they had found that he actually did work
in the building, even though they tried to say that he didn't.
Oh, yeah, maybe, yeah.
He did something with somebody,
and however much of his story was true always gets fishy when you find one thing that's not true,
like that he didn't go to MIT.
Totally.
So you know Stanton Friedman?
Yeah.
You know who Stanton Friedman is?
Stanton Friedman, who's a very famous UFO researcher,
he's one of the main guys arguing that Bob Lazar is full of shit.
Yeah.
You know what's interesting is there is, uh, there is a, um, I know the guy that did
all the research on that and I know the guy that studied it for decades and, uh, he's
actually writing a foreword on the book.
It's the, the journalist has won like eight Peabody awards and Emmys and shit.
Um, but, uh, George Knapp, who I told you about, and he's just got like,
he can speak for hours
on that entire thing.
He's always on the
Coast to Coast show, right?
Yeah, he does like a couple Sundays
each month.
Did you find that element?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
What is it?
Element 115?
Is that what it's called?
Popular Mechanics article
about it right here.
Welcome, Element 115.
Now, what's your real name?
Researchers create Element 115 in the lab for the second time over the first time,
oh, over all in the first time in a decade,
paving the way for its official status as a member of the periodic table.
And so Google Bob Lazar, Element 115.
Because I would think that if he knew that, like that long ago,
like that alone would make people want to take him more seriously.
Yeah.
All the stuff that he said.
Well, first of all, we know that there is a Groom Lake.
We know that there is an Area 51.
We know they denied its existence until they wanted to expand the perimeter.
Until they wanted to, because people would sit on a ledge and they would watch all these test flights of whatever the fuck they had.
Whatever it was they were doing, whether working on stealth bombers or whatever it was
People would film this and so they wanted to expand the perimeter of prohibited area
And so in doing so they had to admit the existence of the base itself. I believe that was in the 90s, right?
It was in the 90s
They expanded the perimeter something else that the government had to do is they had to admit UFOs were real because there was a
something else that the government had to do is they had to admit ufos were real because there was a um some military people look at it yeah he talks about 115 all through this
what year is this jamie does it say the video on the bottom what is it when is it was was this put
out this video well this one here's 2015 but the video was taken on vhs uh yeah old as fuck this
is like 1990 maybe it's on the sci-fi channel do do do do do back when it was spelled
Sci-fi yeah, everyone uses a lot of FY FY. Yeah, that's old as fuck. Yeah
Play some of that though cuz that dudes a trip because he's one of those weird guys where if you're even if you're a skeptical
guy you listen to Bob Lazar talking like
This guy's obviously smart as fuck team
Bob Lazar talking like, this guy's obviously smart as fuck.
Here we go. It is in the top of the reactor.
And the base of the reactor apparently is a small, something similar to a cyclotron.
It's a particle accelerator.
A particle is accelerated to high speed and then deflected up a small tube.
And it's aimed at the 115. This transmutes the
115 similar to the way we do that in a normal particle accelerator. This causes a reaction,
a radiation emission that we really haven't seen before. It produces antimatter.
This antimatter is guided down a tuned tube
and reacts with a gas.
When matter and antimatter react,
they convert to 100% energy.
This energy is converted, heat energy,
is converted to electrical power in the reactor itself.
This is done through a thermoelectric converter.
And this electrical power is used to power other subsystems on the craft,
though there is no wiring, you know, as we would know it.
Also, that's almost a byproduct of the reactor.
The reactor also sets up a gravitational wave from the 115 being bombarded.
This gravitational wave is present at the top of the reactor,
and it is essentially guided in the same way microwaves are guided, through tuned tubes.
And this goes to their amplifying cavities and through the projectors that are in the bottom of the craft.
God, I wish I was smart enough to know whether or not he's full of shit.
Well, so what he's saying is that there's a gravity wave that's accessible on a really
large element that extends beyond the perimeter of the atom.
And when you bombard that element with one particle, kind of like what we were talking
about before, it goes through a tuned tube, like a very tiny miniature CERN.
CERN's like a big magnet.
It holds a particle in a very specific spot. hovers it shoots and it hits that it decays
it becomes this matter antimatter reaction these generators can convert all that energy into power
and then they can amplify that wave that's coming off and emanating from that element and they
amplify it like you would amplify a radio wave uh now there's no wires in the craft
because most likely it was 3d printed we didn't know about 3d printing back then i've talked to
bob about this but not just 3d printing you know just the materials but atomically aligning the
elements so so consciousness and other types of things can move through those materials to operate the craft.
It's really tricky.
So they're operating it without buttons.
Right.
They're operating it.
So that was one of the things that he said.
Theoretically, right?
Yeah.
Was that there was handprints and that, you know, there were much different shaped hands than ours.
Yeah.
And this craft that he had found inside one of these bays in Area 51,
he realized very quickly that it wasn't something that he had found inside one of these bays in area 51 he realized very quickly that it wasn't
something that we had created and that it was somehow another powered through intention yep
that would go through like touch or feel or put their hands would be on this thing and consciously
you would somehow another control all the various aspects of this machine exactly exactly boy it
sounds good doesn't it god i want to believe so hard well I I hope you do because there's gonna be there's gonna
be a lot of stuff I want to know what you've seen though so you've seen this
piece of metal what else have you seen I've seen many many documents on the
studies of these things and I've seen a lot of the science associated with what the technology is and what it does.
Like I could show you if I fold up pieces of paper and stuff what's going on with it.
But basically, you know, these craft, you know, when you – they travel in a straight line, but they're folding space time.
Like in Event Horizon where they explain it by folding a piece of paper
and punching a pencil through it.
Did you ever see that movie?
Yeah, yeah.
It's kind of like that.
Great fucking movie.
But it's more like,
you know, here,
I can draw it for you here.
Not that this is a,
it's kind of like
when you have two points,
you know,
we're used to traveling
in a direction like that.
And so when we look up,
we see a plane
that goes straight.
Right.
But these UFOs
fold space time like this. And so it looks like to them, they're going in a straight line.
So if you're in the ship, you see that. But if you're on the ground, you see that.
Oh, okay.
That's why you see them blink off and on. A lot of those videos, they're on,
that okay that's why you see them blink off and on a lot of those videos they're on they looks like they're jumping it's just because of this so they have holding space-time some way of
interfacing with space itself that's very different than our idea of traveling in a linear way from
point A to point B space the fabric they call it the fabric of space-time because it's like a
fabric it's malleable now let me ask you this how often into a conversation do people look at you and think you are fucking crazy when
you start talking about this?
And how long does it-
All the time, yeah.
All the time, right?
But do you ever get to the point where you're like, I don't want to talk about this?
No, because it's, I always tell people, you don't know what I know.
You know, and there's a lot-
No, no, I mean, like, do you ever get to the point where you're like, I can't do this anymore?
No.
And people think I'm fucking crazy?
No, because I'm involved on the most important shit I've ever been in my life so you think this is like the
most important thing that you've ever done oh fuck yeah like i i have meetings with senators
coming up like do you oh fuck yeah what senators i can't tell you damn it's all this i can't tell
you stuff i know because this is some fucking tricky shit when is all this going to come out
like it seems like this is like an imminent rather disclosure type shit.
Watch what my company does. That's what I'll say.
So what is your company? What are you trying to do?
Well, we created, so if you look at the people involved, we have senior, when you get to the senior levels of government, you're either called an SES or SIS, Senior Intelligence Service,
Senior Executive Service, or you're a brass. But either way, the civilians have the same
your executive service, or your BRAS.
But either way, the civilians have the same kind of ranking charter that the BRAS does.
So SES-3, SAS-3 would be the same thing as a three-star general.
So that's who these people are around me.
So I had the head of the skunk works, engineering.
I got, you know, SIS-2 star from the clandestine directorate of operations.
I have a guy under secretary of intelligence for the Senate Intelligence Committee and was...
These guys are retired?
Quasi. Everyone's retired? Quasi-retired.
They all left
public life and now are
involved with what you're doing.
They are current consultants
to the intelligence community.
Okay. That's probably the
most difficult thing. And involved in this project with clearance?
They all have their top secret TSSCI clearances, yeah.
I'm the only one that does it.
On my entire team, I'm the only one that does it.
Actually, Lou, that just came out, I hired him away.
So he was head of all, he was in charge of all classified operations for Secretary of Defense Mattis.
So he was what's called a GS-15 right underneath the one, two, and three stars.
He ran the Advanced Aerial Threat Program, and it's still continuing to this day, and he's with us now.
So the Advanced Aerial Threat Program under the United States government is essentially a UFO information gathering assessment.
Assessment of all of the of what those machines are doing that gives off all these types of effects that people are witnessing.
But there's also a very large group of people that have had within government that have had close contact,
like hundreds, and it's connected to my group. And there's just more coming in that way. So
that program is trying to figure out what those technologies did to those people and how those
technologies work, even though it's more about tasking our assets like satellites and other things to be able to find these things better.
But this is different than the Secret Machines book, which is more of another thing altogether.
So is there communication between the United States government and alien life forms?
I personally, I mean, I don't know any of this stuff because I'm not invited to those types of meetings, but I personally wouldn't doubt it.
You wouldn't doubt it, but they've never alluded to it or discussed it with you in any way?
Not this group of people, no.
Is there any speculation as to what they're doing?
Resource extraction.
Resource extraction, like minerals?
Empire building.
I tell people, no i i think it's cheese
i think it's tacos i think you know they're here for the same reason i am but uh um i tell people
like a good way to look at this is like look at syria and syria's in chaos because the united
states and russia are having a proxy war there now look at at the Earth. It's the exact same thing. Different races are coming here,
and they're trying to win against each other.
So there's more than one race?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
How many different ones are there?
Yeah, this universe we're talking about.
I don't know how many.
I don't know.
But there's a bunch of different creatures,
and they all have the same sort of technology?
Yeah, and some are very human.
Some look just like you and I.
Really?
Absolutely, yeah.
Now, is there any sort of speculation as to why life forms from other planets, other galaxies, other solar systems, different kind of gravity, different environments would create a life form that's exactly similar to us?
Or are they imitating what we look like in order to infiltrate our world and hang with us?
I think probably all the above. I mean, look, if you look at Syria,
are you just going to say it's only Russia and America there?
No, China's probably there.
France is probably there.
I personally think the little aliens with the big black eyes,
those are androids.
They're biological robots.
They're just programmed.
There's no different than us cloning sheep.
They just clone a being that
can travel through space because space or some sort of artificial intelligence thing that doesn't
have a life form right yeah i've heard that idea before and it kind of kind of makes sense a little
bit right i mean if if you're a living thing and you're traveling through space obviously you have
biological limitations in terms of the need for oxygen and gravitational interactions and all these different things.
Well, one of the scary hallmarks of those ones, the rumor is that in the back of their head is a transmitter.
So you've got to wonder where it's sending shit.
But at the same time, I can tell you that when you look at the Bible, the angels and the demons of the Bible would be the humans and the androids that I just told you about.
So you think the greys are the androids, right?
Yeah.
So you think they're like some sort of devil?
No.
I just think that that's how we characterized it because they come in, control your thoughts, control your body, take you.
Take us in the middle of the night.
Yeah.
Demons, you know.
So do you think these things are traveling from where?
Do we have any idea?
There's things that have been put out there, but I've never asked.
Why would you not ask that?
What the fuck?
You're going to tell me star system like 483?
Well, you know about element 115.
I would want to know about Starship Enterprise coordinate 115B65 Polaris,
wherever the fuck it is.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know.
I do know that there's connections to, man, you won't even fucking believe it.
I'll tell you that.
Please.
Atlantis.
Atlantis, the sunken city?
Yeah.
There's a connection?
There's a connection.
What's the connection?
That there is a very advanced group that left after a catastrophe and hung around in a small outpost here and and throughout time would push
civilization forward and that's who the greek gods were whoa yep and that's why it's very
interesting when the roswell wreckage there's greek writing is there there is i've never seen
any of the wreckage from roswell view it's online you see it type in roswell wreckage you can see
it well all i've ever seen is the dude standing in front of the bullshit,
the weather balloon stuff with the laughing and yucking it up.
Roswell wreckage, Roswell I-beam.
You'll see it.
And it's got these Greek markings.
And the witnesses that were there did, what do they call it,
where they go on oath and tell.
Actual I-beam showing the word elef pharia which means freedom
in ancient greek so where is that from jamie let me tell you when i want me i don't know it popped
up when it well i'm gonna tell you something else so i went and met um a former director of cia and
nsa he was director of both I won't tell you his name.
And right when I sat down and told him about my book.
Pull that picture up again.
Look at those little hands.
And right when I sat down and told him about my,
you gotta, this is a big deal. So I'm sitting with this guy.
He was like, not that long ago,
was director of CIA and he went on to be director of NSA.
Okay.
Well, I think we can find his name.
Maybe.
But right when I sat down and told him about the book, you know what he says to me?
What? He goes, I didn't read much science fiction as a kid, but I read a lot about Greek mythology
and looked me in the eye. I said, well, you're going to love the last page of my book. Then
he's all in my, and, uh, um, when my book was about ready to go to pressing, I had a very
important person call me up. He says, can you stop that pressing and maybe insert something about Greek mythology? And I said,
I sure can. So what, something you got to realize is for example, the sixth biggest defense
contractor in the world, at least they used to be six, is a company called Science Applications
International Corporation, SAIC. Their headquarters are actually in San Diego.
International Corporation, SAIC.
Their headquarters are actually in San Diego.
And in the front of the building,
you have an obelisk coming out of a fake lake and two Atlantean on thrones.
And they're both holding pyramids.
And one says the past and one says the future.
And they're eight foot tall statues.
It's fucking nuts, by the way.
And SAIC, they just, they went over to Litos Michael Hayden former director
of NSA and the CIA what about it no that's not him but I'm not gonna I'm not gonna tell you if
you try and find out look at you guys just fishing around over here I'll say a name you blink yeah
I'll show you my no pun intended that was cute I'll show you my dick like yeah there we go if
you if you come across not sure what yeah whatever you get I'm'll show you my dick. Like, yeah, there we go. If you, if you get it right or wrong, not sure what, yeah, whatever you get, I'm going
to show you my dick.
What do you think about all that Zechariah Sitchin stuff?
I think he was close.
I don't think he was exact, but it's interpretive.
You know, if I was to show you some symbols for people who don't know what that is, Zechariah
Sitchin is a, is a Palestinian scholar that decoded a lot of ancient Sumerian texts that were written in Akkadian.
Sumer was like kind of the first civilization that was advanced that we even know of just out of nowhere here, like 3,500 years before Christ.
There's mathematics, astronomy and all this different shit.
They knew all the planets.
They said there's an extra planet.
But Zachariah Sitchin was the one that really spent a lot of time doing that.
And there's a lot of other scholars that disagree.
Now, he can say, you know, in those texts is the story of the Garden of Eden, the flood of Noah, like all that shit.
But his take on it was those who from heaven to earth came called them angels, but they were an advanced race.
They fucked around with genetics
well that was the his take on the definition of nephilim was the was the nephilim yeah what you
find you find that in genesis the nephilim so you know he he was able to tell a really interesting
story based on these texts and um but some people don't agree with them but at the at the end of the
day i think it's the closest thing we got and in my early conversations when i was when i was being given
some interesting science fiction stuff for my book uh the the greek mythology part i brought
up the sumerians and they they showed me one particular king they said this we find this one
very interesting and i can't remember his name but it fired so quick when I asked the question.
It came right back with this whole thing on this one Sumerian king.
Really interesting.
Well, what's fascinating about them is that they really did know a lot about our solar system.
And you think about the fact that they were around 5,000 years ago.
They had a detailed model of the solar system with all of the planets.
And they were all relatively close in size.
This is a clay, one of those clay cylinders that you would,
what you would do is you would put out a flat piece of clay,
and you would roll the cylinder over it, and that's how they would print things.
Yep.
And this really sort of kind of primitive way of doing this,
somehow or another, they knew a lot about astronomy.
I mean, they knew about the
structure of our solar system. They knew where the planets were. Right. Well, you got to remember
Galileo was almost killed and confined to his house arrest because he said that the universe
doesn't revolve around us. We revolve around the sun. And that was way after. That's four or five
thousand years after the Sumerians that already knew that, you know,
we weren't the center of the universe.
So it's interesting.
We were really smart.
And then we went kind of backwards,
you know,
and,
and there's probably a bit more to that story too,
that hopefully one day we'll get into it.
Well,
it's just,
it's really interesting when you look at these ancient civilizations and their
attempts to decipher the world around them and you try to figure out what
did they know you know how much did they know the the sumerians are one of the more interesting
cases to me because of the fact that they had this really bizarre map of uh the solar system
yeah when you know we didn't they they found out about pluto they had a an image of pluto
and i don't think we found out about Pluto until like the early 1900s.
Yeah, Pluto might have even been like 50s or 60s.
Jamie, see if you can find that out.
Pluto was found like not even that long ago.
I don't even know if it was as far back as the 1900s.
See if you can find that out and then find the image of the Anunnaki when they showed the solar system.
Because the image is really fascinating.
It is what it is.
I mean, you look at it, there's a sun i mean it's clearly a sun it has like it's a large
circle it's in the sky and it has like those little sun sort of rays around this picture right
because yeah yeah that's the picture there you go yeah so do you know they they have an idea of
where to look for this extra planet they They thought in the early nineties,
JPL announced that they thought they found a companion to our son.
Yeah.
Look at that.
I mean,
that's fucking radical right there.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
They have Pluto in there.
Now go to the discovery of Pluto.
When,
when did Pluto get discovered?
I think you're right.
I think it was in the 1950s.
I know it was sometime in the 19.
Well,
I'm talking about Disney's Pluto,
which 1930,
1930. Crazy, I'm talking about Disney's Pluto. Which one are you talking about? 1930.
Crazy.
Crazy shit?
Yeah, so these people somehow or another knew about Pluto fucking way before us.
And this is not something you could see with the naked eye.
So somehow or another, and nor were those other planets.
I mean, you could see a few of them.
You could see Mars, and sometimes you could see Jupiter.
And maybe Saturn, right?
Can you see Saturn? What are the ones you can see with the naked eye? Sometimes you can see Mars, and sometimes you could see Jupiter, and maybe Saturn, right? Can you see Saturn?
What are the ones you can see with the naked eye?
Sometimes you can see Saturn, yeah.
But after that, they had Uranus.
You can't see Uranus.
Just the other day.
No, you can't.
I think it was the one time of, I don't know, every 25 years, you can barely see it with
the naked eye.
Uranus?
Which was last week or something like that.
Uranus or Saturn?
A bunch of people were at Griffith Observatory.
It was super crowded because of that.
Are we not going to make jokes and shit about your ass, right?
No.
Because it's so old.
It's expected.
Let's get that.
Yeah, and were they looking at it with the naked eye or with telescopes?
I think so.
I feel like you could obviously go to the Griffith Observatory.
Because everyone goes there.
There's a bunch of telescopes already set up every day.
Right, but that makes sense for telescopes.
But why with the naked eye?
Because it's one of the best places, closest in L.A.
I don't know.
I'll look for it.
Okay.
Yeah, L.A. is weird because of the light pollution, right? No, it's one of the best places, closest in LA. I don't know. Okay. Yeah, LA's weird because of the light pollution, right?
It's a big deal. That's why, you know,
when you go to the desert and it's beautiful.
That's what you're listening to. It was last week,
October 19th, you could see with your naked eye.
Uranus, you could see with your naked eye. You guys are talking about
naked and Uranus a lot here, and I don't
want to make any jokes. I'm not, but I'm just telling you what you're talking about.
See Uranus with your naked eye this
week. Giggle if you must.
Nice.
What a goofy name too.
Like what?
All the different sounds
you can make with your
face and they chose
your butthole.
What if they just
called it butthole?
Yeah, butthole.
Planet butthole.
That would be just as
weird.
I would go there
fucking crazy fast.
It would be the first
place I'd go.
That would be the
first place you'd
visit?
Planet butthole?
Yeah.
Do you think that
there's life in our solar system?
I do.
Where do you think it is?
Europa.
Really?
So you think there's some sort of a primitive life form that's under the ice?
I think there's life on Mars, and I think it's, we'll start from, I think there's life on Mars.
I think it's small little animals and microbial or insects, shit that's kind of learning how to live with its radioactive environment um which by the way a bunch of scientists from jpl found that there was
some atomic weapons that went off on mars because the the the radioactive signature
is can only happen if you explode a nuclear weapon that's artificially made not like a
like something that
happens naturally like a moon exploding on the surface so it's interesting so uh where'd you
read that oh shit that's that's been all over the place i forgot the guy's name the doctor's name um
he's uh he actually was a one of the lead scientists on a clementine mission which was
mapping the moon with jpl so he's a he's big-time dude. And he thinks there was nuclear war on Mars.
Well, he doesn't say that.
He just says that...
Oh, nuclear weapons exploded on Mars.
He just says, we have this signature.
All peer-reviewed signs that the signature of the radioactive activity
from this very specific isotope that only comes from artificial nuclear explosion
or something something shit.
I don't want to mess it up.
Something along those lines.
Yeah.
Well, I'd heard before that they thought that somehow or another Mars was impacted,
that something hit it, like some sort of an asteroid impact, and it destroyed the environment.
I think it's the, if you type in nuclear weapon Mars or nukes on Mars or some shit, you'll find it.
You go to Richard Hoagland's site.
Hoagland, Hoagland's, he kind of disappeared, though.
Yeah, that guy was
wacky as fuck. Like he was
one of the main proponents
of the face on Mars and all
the pyramids that they found on Mars. They would
find these weird connections
between one point to another point and
somehow or another they made some arbitrary distinctions
that those were indicative of
intelligent design.
Elon Musk wanted to drop nukes up there, too, apparently.
Good move.
Elon Musk elaborates on his proposal to nuke Mars.
How's that picture?
He's probably bored.
Why not?
He's probably bored.
He put on his Instagram last night,
he was cooking hot dogs and marshmallows
and singing along with Johnny Cash, drinking whiskey.
That's what he should be doing.
That's my kind of fucking scientist.
Yeah.
That's Elon Musk for president.
I'll vote for you, buddy.
Come on. Let's do it. I know I'll vote for you, buddy. Come on.
Let's do it.
I know.
Why don't you talk to him, man?
He's already got SpaceX.
Why don't you guys collaborate?
The second thing we're doing, he might really actually be interested in it.
So the two aerospace projects to the stars is doing one is we're building something that
will in effect be anti-gravity, but it's actually, that's actually not the mechanism it does
and building a spacecraft.
But the second thing that we're doing is called beamed energy propulsion, which is something I think Musk will be very interested in.
It's launching CubeSats with lasers.
So the Air Force Research Lab kind of broke the science back in the 90s.
And a bunch of people associated with that program got it declassified.
And they're working for us on building it.
So it'll take a handful of years to do.
But what you do is you use very strong either microwaves or some other kind of wave
and it ignites and explodes the air underneath a mechanism that carries a CubeSat.
And so essentially what happens is you don't use any fossil fuels
and it can bring the cost of launching a CubeSat from like 50 grand down to 5 grand.
It's like crazy.
Bring the cost of launching a CubeSat from like 50 grand down to five grand. It's a crazy So that means colleges and neighbors and and anyone else can launch CubeSats quite easily now
Have you had any debates with people about this stuff?
Have you ever like had someone who thinks that this is all nonsense and sat down with you understands physics and understands?
rocket propulsion
Space and elements and all that shit. Um, no, I have I wouldn't be able to debate a physicist
But they can read all the papers. You know right, but I mean is anybody been skeptical yeah, everyone's right
Oh, yeah, and what's your response to that? You don't know what I know right?
Well, you know though. I can't don't know I can't tell you some of the shit that I know and I can't tell you
But what could it be that's so crazy? If you know, I mean, what you've said.
Think about what you've said.
You said that there's some ridiculous sort of propulsion system that allows you to move through time.
That they visit this planet all the time and extract resources.
That there's people in the government that are trying to disseminate this information, but they don't know how to do it. They don't know the right vehicle
to do it. They're doing it in these sort of
controlled chunks.
Think of all these things that you've said. What could possibly
be crazier than that?
Well, you're asking me how do I know?
No, no, no. I'm asking you what do you know
that could possibly be crazier than that?
Well, that's the shit I can't tell you.
Not everything's hunky-dory.
Is it something where you're worried about the fate of the human race?
I think that's part of it.
Where should I move?
If I was going to move?
It's not existential.
Whip your dick out if I should go to Australia.
How about I just whip my dick out in Australia?
I mean, where's the spot?
I don't think there is one, unfortunately.
There's no spot.
This is what I will say.
It's not existential in the sense of they're not going to come here like Independence Day and nuke the place.
But there are things to worry about.
And that's why I think.
Do you think there's anybody that's famous that's an alien?
Oh, I don't know.
Do you think there's any influential figure that has been sort of shaping culture that might not be one of us?
Oprah.
Ooh.
For sure.
Has to be Oprah.
Yeah, but if you go back to the early days when Oprah used to do that stupid show where she'd have like KKK members on and everybody sat on white plastic seats.
Remember those days?
Is that Geraldo or is that Oprah?
Oprah.
Early days, man.
Me and Al Madrigal.
I'll never forget this.
It was like when I first met Al, like late 90s I think we were in San Francisco doing bong hits watching TV
and Oprah was on and it was old Oprah bong hair Oprah big hair Oprah I know
I've been the 90s might have been early 2000s the aliens from Men in Black they
were watching at the beginning remember you know You know, I don't know.
I mean, I, again, there's elements of this subject that are disturbing.
And, you know, I don't think people need to know all that shit.
So do you subscribe to the idea that human beings are the product of genetic engineering?
I do, yes. You do.
So you think that they took some lower hominids and that they did something to them to create human beings.
That is a very popular theory among UFO fanatics.
I should say fans, devotees.
I don't want to speak again for my company, but one of the people on our board, they call
it a SAP, Scientific Advisory Board, is a lead geneticist from Stanford who, I think
he was up for the Nobel this year.
What's his name?
Dr. Gary Nolan.
And he would be the guy to ask about that get him in here but he would but he's
he's only going to tell you what's what what he can prove with science he's not going to speculate
right now so what what makes people think that like what's the science that makes people think
that well there's a lot of junk dna there's certain parts of our DNA that seems to have been turned off. There's there's a bunch of things in there that we don't understand. And we don't have the leaps of humanity over the past 5000 years to really show like where did what happened in the past 5000 years that wasn't happening for the hundreds of millions of years before that.
that wasn't happening for the hundreds of millions of years before that.
They just found a footprint that was like 100 million years old or something like that.
That was just a human footprint.
What?
Yeah, I just read the news.
Where'd they find that?
I don't know.
I can't remember, but it's like a fossil.
And now they're like, fuck, this totally throws everything upside down.
Are you even talking to Sarah Palin?
That was something that Sarah Palin said.
Remember that?
Like there was a librarian that said that she didn't believe that she was a young Earth creationist.
She thought that there was a picture online that showed a human footprint inside a dinosaur footprint that approved that people walked with dinosaurs.
I wouldn't doubt it.
You wouldn't doubt that people walked with dinosaurs?
Oh, not at all. I think there's been cycles of civilizations.
And I think the people on the inside know that. And that's why at that defense contractor, multi, multi, multi, multi-billion dollar defense contractor, the ones that chose the government of Iraq after we took over Iraq and the ones that looked after all of our nukes.
Hey, look at there.
Human footprint inside a dinosaur footprint.
She's right.
But they have at that place, remember I told you, they have the past and the future with big pyramids in their hands, tetrahedrons.
You know, it's like, it's spooky when you look at that.
Do you believe that the asteroid hit the Yucatan and caused a mass extinction that killed off most of the life on the planet?
I don't know.
I can't believe any.
I don't know.
Fuck, I've never studied that shit.
And I wasn't there.
But, I mean, there's like physical evidence for that.
It's more like, well, yeah, but I haven't read anything about it.
But sure.
I mean, I can believe in things. I can't prove a lot of things you know right but
that's like the whole reason why we're supposedly here that it killed off the dinosaurs and allowed
whatever they think there was some sort of a mole mole type creature that evolved over 65 million
years to become a bullshit i think that's all bullshit i think you think evolution's bullshit
um no i think that at some point in history
They came someone came here and tampered with existing creatures and made us and upgraded us had very specific in her
But who tampered with them and what came first the chicken of the egg? You know question? Yeah
I know a single-celled organism. We all kind of agree like that was like the beginning right most scientists Most scientists, not we, I'm too stupid for this, but obviously somehow or another that became a bird, right?
Why couldn't it become a monkey?
Why could that monkey become a person?
I think, yeah, I don't know.
I mean, look, evolution changes.
I mean, we know that people that like beat their kids, their kids' DNA changes based on getting beat, you know?
So when you were fighting, you were changing people's DNA and you were a geneticist, you
know, you went after it for science, you know, that's why you were doing the fighting, right?
Yeah, for sure.
It's a lab coat on.
So if you, if you think about it that way, if you think about that, that all life somehow
or another continues to evolve and advanced and through natural selection, genetic mutation, and random mutations that things move from one stage of existence to what they are today.
When you look at a condor or a hippopotamus, that it used to be something different and now it's that.
Sure.
Why wouldn't that be the case with people, too?
I think that is the case with people.
case of people too i think that is the case with people i just think that the quantum leaps in our evolution are symptoms or effects of being genetically upgraded the way i've heard it
explained to me though is that those the only leap that's really confusing is the doubling of the
human brain that's the big leap and it's over the period of two million years apparently obviously
i'm too stupid to really understand this but from from what I've read and what I've heard people talk about,
that's apparently one of the biggest mysteries
when it comes to the human fossil record.
But there's a pretty clear line, apparently,
from Australopithecus to the Homo sapiens.
Don't be using big words on me.
Australopithecus is not a big word.
Sounds like it.
What the fuck is that stuff again?
Penis? Uranus? Yeah. Whatever fuck is that stuff again? Penis?
Uranus?
Yeah.
Whatever that's called.
115.
Element 115.
That stuff.
That stuff.
So what is your company aiming to do and when are you trying to do it?
So the next steps.
So To The Stars Academy of Arts and Science.
Why is it an academy?
Because.
Teaching people?
Yeah.
There's teaching.
There's science.
There's arts major.
There's film franchises.
So what this is.
Don't say musicals.
No musicals, right?
It's only musicals.
I'm sorry.
UFO musicals.
It's like, everything's cool, but it's a really stupid art form.
Oh shit.
It's a, it's a musical, but it's very salacious.
Very, very sexual musicals.
But okay.
So what we did essentially is you have a senior engineer, chief engineer from the classified aerospace world building shit.
And then you have a guy like me that's putting out some stories and making some movies about some things.
And then you have my physicists.
Can I stop you there?
I'm sorry to interrupt, but why stories and why fiction?
There's going to be both.
There's going to be both. But why fiction fiction why not just concentrate entirely on revealing the truth?
Um because it has to be managed in a certain way for people to understand and I think that someone's sitting down and watching a
debate play out
And having an idea of what what went on over the past 70 years
they'll come out of that with an emotional response and more of an understanding
and then want to go watch the documentary
and then want to buy some of the nonfiction works
that we've done.
I've already put out one of our nonfiction books
with Secret Machines.
Now, that movie, what is it, Arrival?
Yeah.
Is that the movie?
Where there's like sort of weird time shit in that movie?
Yeah.
Does that movie have any basis in reality
no secret people behind the scenes no i don't think so but uh there's nothing in there that's
familiar to me other than the fact that the the dream sequences and the time stuff and her
having flashes of that shit's absolutely on par and um the idea of having uh an international
group work together to figure something out, that's absolutely on par.
That's happening right now.
Oh, yeah.
And everybody's keeping their mouth shut.
Oh, fuck yeah.
Why are they doing that?
Why aren't people spilling the beans?
Well, it's not every.
I mean, look at Lou Elizondo, the guy that works for me that just came from the Pentagon, literally quit the Pentagon two weeks ago.
I was, I can't tell you where I'm at.
I can't tell you.
I know.
I'm sorry.
I was, I can't tell you where I'm at.
I can't tell you. I know, I'm sorry.
But he's with me and he was on stage with me on the live event we did on the 11th saying,
I left the Pentagon days ago.
I ran this particular UFO program.
And this is what we know.
And they are real.
And we're going to continue that program here at To The Stars.
Now, so your goal is to release this information
through documentaries, through films,
and to educate people of the existence of this?
And is it to make a ship?
No, so this is, once again, look,
by putting together, you can't attack this subject
by just, like, if you make a movie,
you say, oh, that's a crazy movie.
If you make a science paper on it,
no one's going to read it.
And the technology will never see the light of day because it's been modified as weaponry or whatever it is that the only way to get people to understand what the fuck is going on is by first present them the story.
So they have an understanding that it is real and it is happening and laid in a way that's grounded and practical and but still moves you and then follow up with the science and then show them that that thing you're watching in the movie can be engineered and created.
So we are doing it all together.
But there's a thing with the Department of Defense to share information, to educate people, to put some now declassified videos of UFOs, some science, some documents, and have open forums and have current military people talk to young adults.
So you're going to expose people to this narrative and explain to them through stories what this could be.
That sets the stage.
Then you start to introduce the actual real elements that actually exist.
Yep.
And then eventually what?
What's the end game? Well, the end game is to the technology itself is like, so when you make, when you create this energy source that powers a spacecraft,
it's called an over-unity machine.
So it puts out more power than what's put into it.
You can desalinate ocean water with it.
You can get rid of atomic power.
So there's no radio, no more Fukushima's, you know.
It could do a lot of different things.
But it also will rapidly, rapidly transform our entire transportation and communication
network.
So the end result with that is that'll get spun out into a company that's probably partners
with major aerospace organizations, which with whom I'm already talking and we partner
on that.
You can't tell me who they are.
No, fuck.
No, I can't tell you.
And we bring that out to the world.
But the only way that can be brought out to the world
is if the public owns it and we build it from scratch.
Why the public?
Why does the public have to own it?
Because, well, I guess it could be in a way a private person,
but the technology probably has an element
of what they call eminent domain.
So we're going to get to a certain point
where certain agencies will probably knock on our door
and go, what the fuck are you doing?
And we're going to say, the public owns this.
You can't take it from them.
And they're going to say, fuck yeah, we can take it.
And we're going to say, we're going to work something out
because it's like building a nuclear bomb
in your basement kind of thing.
So when you say the public owns it,
like how will that be possible?
How will the public own it?
You can go to our, we've reserved a small amount of shares
of the company that people can buy stock in the company right now. So a year ago, the security-
But that's not the public, that's private. It's not private ownership, right? If people buy,
the company can go public, but it's not- No, it is public. So a year and a half ago,
maybe 24 months ago, the SEC wanted to democratize going public with companies just
like an IPO, but not have to spend millions of dollars and do it.
So they launched what's called a Regulation A direct public offering.
And we had a file with the SEC.
So we had to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to do this.
And we spent the last six months doing it.
And our live event launched that.
So you can go to-
And you did this just so that you can
tell the whoever the fuck it is that will come after you that hey the public owns this you can't
take this that's one element of everything that we're doing yeah that so you're anticipate you're
spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to anticipate someone coming in and closing the
doors and that yet you're talking about it in advance.
You're essentially telling them that you know, but you're letting them know that you know that they're going to come and get it. It's going to be much harder to shut it down when the whole world has paid for it, invested in it, owns it.
So you're trying to get people to buy things?
What do you mean?
You're trying to get people to buy stock.
Well, yeah, right now we're public.
You can buy shares of the company.
We only put up a very limited amount that we only put i think we only put up five five million
shares so that seems like a lot of shares how many shares are there all oh there's oh there's
like a hundred million probably or something like that how does that how does shares work
shares like you just work like say if we uh came up with young jamie incorporated yeah and we wanted
to start selling shares when you file as corporation, you can issue shares and you can sell those shares to people.
And those shares have a price based on how you want to value your company.
Okay.
So you could have like 100 million shares of Young Jamie Incorporated?
Yep.
You sure can.
Okay.
And so then the government can't shut you down, bro.
Nah.
Well, you guys maybe because you say a lot of bad words. No, jamie doesn't but i'm warming we do a lot at the company right so
we're building essentially a science fiction version of disney okay so we have four film
franchises not all of them about ufos one is kind of this blade runner night all about nightmares
kind of thing one is like an old amblin Spielberg movie. Who's making these things?
Oh, we are.
I mean, who's writing them?
I wrote the first one.
I'm directing that.
You're directing too?
I wrote this script.
Look at you,
you multi-talented motherfucker.
Well, look,
that's where I'm going with most of this stuff
but the company
I had to get up
and get going
and set it up
and we bring in a CEO
and all that kind of shit.
But isn't that
that's a bizarre formula, right?
An entertainment company
that's also gonna do aerospace and science.
Well, the heart of it is when we do what's called confirmation, not disclosure, confirmation.
The heart of it is, is how do we tell stories that galvanize the human race and let them
know a little bit more about what's going on and how do we present them science so they
understand that consciousness and a lot of other things are real,
and how do we build a technology associated with those stories
and with those science that can change the world?
And that's why it's an academy.
Do they have any pickled bodies anywhere?
Okay, from Malahide?
I believe they do, yeah.
You believe they do?
Nobody's ever told you that?
It's just a guess?
I believe they do.
You believe they do?
You can't say any more than that?
I'm not going to say any more than that.
You said so much.
I know.
It's so weird what you can and can't say.
Well, I could tell you other shit offline probably.
Oh, okay.
Offline.
I can't wait to end this podcast.
I can find out the real deal.
Don't kick me out so I can tell you some weird shit.
So now what's the timeline for moving forward with all this stuff?
Okay.
So in the next few weeks, we're going to be releasing the first declassified videos of these advanced aerial threat UFOs.
And they are current videos that were just caught and with audio and everything of the people tracking them.
And we're going to launch the beta version of the Community of Interest, which is the partnered website that's going to be hosting all this declassified information,
where we're going to be having the hardcore conversations with people that want to understand this stuff. We're going to be also doing an
experiment with that piece of metal to show the world that the technology is not only real, but
it's, it's demonstrable. And the videos are very much a proof of concept. You know, it's showing
you, look, it works, you know. So we're going to build it.
Do you think it's going to be weird for people to take you seriously because you're a rock star?
Maybe if you were some sort of a physicist or a scientist, they would listen to you more.
Well, I remember when Elon came out years ago and he started SpaceX.
And then he started Tesla.
Here's this dude saying all this ambitious shit.
I didn't buy any of it. That guy's 100 times smarter than the both of us combined he's fucking gnarly i know but i'm
just saying he's not like more believable once you hear maybe maybe i think he is i mean shit
he's badass but look at the people you what's interesting to me is you haven't seen who are
with have you looked at the bios on this shit no yeah you got to read the bios of the people i
didn't want to be tainted i wanted to talk to you well one of one of the the on my on my sat the scientific board advisory board is
you know one of the guys at cia that headed up the entire bio warfare program and the director
of operations the clandestine division so all these guys have found you how various ways so
they've come to you because they you're like the beacon. I did something.
This is the way to go.
I did something that no one thought was possible.
What's that?
Was tying together a mechanism that can perpetually fund itself and can communicate and can innovate all with people that sit at a seat. I created a round table with engineers, scientists,
and tell high ranking intelligence officials and, uh, and some others I can't tell you about,
obviously. And the, this in the defense world, it's called stove piping. So when they,
when they compartmentalize a secret, they put them into these vertical categories that can't
talk to each other. I created a horizontal structure where all these people in these amazing accomplished positions in government
were able to come together at the same table and they can discuss what we want to teach the world
and how we want to do that. And, but the, but the way to do that is including the public and making
it a public benefit corporation.
And what that means is we're able to spend money, and it's in our charter, on things that can benefit the world and not just provide a return to the investors.
But what we're doing happens to be extremely lucrative.
Extremely lucrative for investors?
For investors and the company.
Say if young Jamie wants to be a part of it, what does he have to do?
You just go to thestarsacademy.com and you buy shares, whatever you want to buy.
And how will it be lucrative for him?
Because, first of all, the technology itself is like a trillion-dollar thing.
If we can figure that out over the next eight years, and they think we can.
Who's they?
The engineers that are building this thing.
So Steve Justice, that was head of advanced programs at the Skunk Works,
we talked about that.
They are the tip of the spear for the most advanced spacecraft and aircraft
that the United States National Security Apparatus has, period, period, hands down.
And he was the big boy there.
And their model, we think we have, you know, this is a guess, but I think there's a 60% chance within 36 months or so we'll be able to demonstrate something pretty kick-ass.
And as long as there's no major obstacle there, we think within eight years we'll be able to have something.
But it's expensive, and we've got to work with the government, and we're going to have to work with major aerospace. For example, this one meeting I have coming up with, with a big name aerospace company
is offering their material sciences division. We need that. We need to be able to create
certain metals that can resonate in certain, certain frequencies, shit like that.
The other way that the company makes money is when we build this, the, the satellite launching
system, that's like exactly what Elon's doing now, putting satellites in orbit.
But we don't have to build rockets.
We can launch them with lasers.
That's a big, big deal.
You point lasers at the bottom of a CubeSat, which is like the size of a shoebox, and you can put it into low-Earth orbit, and you can put it up even higher without using any fossil fuels, with using light.
That's a big deal.
That's a multi-billion-dollar gimmick right there.
Has this been proven? Yeah. You've seen a proof of concept? There's video. There's a big deal. That's a multi-billion dollar gimmick right there. Has this been proven?
Yeah.
I mean, you've seen a proof of concept?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
There's videos.
There's video of this actually happening?
Yeah, it's in our launch video.
If you watch the video at the top of the tothestarsacademy.com page, you'll see shots of it where a little
thing's glowing and it's getting beamed up into the sky.
That's the Air Force.
Yeah.
My guys were on that project.
Little things glowing?
Yeah.
They have mass, though, like a satellite?
Yeah, yeah.
They're called CubeSat.
Do you know what a CubeSat is?
No.
A CubeSat is a modular box that you put together as modules based on what you need.
Okay, I need a thruster, I need a sensor, and I need a fucking RF signal thing to send the data back home.
So now you've got three little boxes attached.
That's a CubeSat.
They call them cubes.
back home. So now you've got three little boxes attached. That's a CubeSat. They call them cubes.
So it's essentially, it's probably 80% of the satellite business, but now they got to put all these CubeSats together on Musk's rocket. That's also launching giant satellites for DOD or
whatever. But it's super expensive because you have a rocket and you have all the fossil fuels
and all this stuff. If you launch these CubeSats with lasers, because they're not that heavy and you can,
like I said, it would take a cost of launching a CubeSat from 50 grand a pound down to five
grand.
That's a huge deal.
So there's a video of this actually happening.
That's on your, what is the, to the stars academy.com.
Is that what it is?
And you can watch the, you can watch the video and then you go to the entertainment division, which is my primary spot.
Making movies and selling millions of books and licensing the stuff out is the reason why Disney's $300 billion and Warner Brothers is $5 billion.
Warner Brothers just makes movies.
Disney, they make franchises, and they're vertically integrated.
We put out the book.
We put out the T-shirts.
We make the movie.
So that's really where we're going.
And we have three television series that are probably one of which will be announced probably in the next couple of weeks.
The other two were a little further out on that.
The first film, our first film is first quarter next year.
I wrote that one.
And I'll be directing that one.
It's called Strange Times, which is like a hard R version of the Goonies, but funny, but scary and fucked up,
but with 17 and 18 year old kids. Um, and then, uh, and then secret machines, the motion picture,
that's, these are all franchises. So strange times has an animated series that's coming out.
Uh, we have a wonderful writer from Saturday night live that's show running the thing.
That's coming out.
We have a wonderful writer from Saturday Night Live that's show running the thing.
We have an unscripted show coming out on the entire company, just following us in a very national geographic way as we do all these things.
And as we build lasers, as we're on the movie sets, as we're in the lab, you know, pinging that those those pieces of metal I told you about.
So there's a lot of things like that going um
so when you ask about how do we monetize all this shit we have a full functioning entertainment
division it's been up for a few years that's what i've been doing and that's how i made the book and
we've put out seven novels already but your end goal is ultimately to expose all this information
my end my end goal is not just that my end goal is to build a company that changes the world.
And by doing a traditional IPO in the next five to seven years,
and to do that, I grabbed very, very high-ranking people
from various areas in the government to achieve all this stuff.
And they don't need to come in on the movies.
I have that on lock. That's my thing.
But it can function as a way to help people understand what the fuck is going on.
So some of the movies, some of the TV series, some of the nonfiction works that we do
will all be about that subject, but the rest of it won't be.
All right, dude. Well, that's a very ambitious project and let us know when you're ready to
go to the moon or Mars or wherever the fuck you're going to go.
Uranus.
Yeah, you can go to Uranus, all those places.
All right.
And I hope it's all real.
I'm excited.
Cool.
Thanks, guys.
It's true.
Thanks for having me.
Oh, thanks for coming on, brother.
Yeah, thank you so much.
Thank you.
Bye, everybody.
All right.
Are we off?
Yeah.
Are we off?
Are we off?
I'll show you something.