Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Now here's a highlight from Coast to coast AM on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Stephen, there is a study band an astronomer named Beatrice
Villa Royal. What's so important about that?
Speaker 3 (00:11):
Oh? Oh boy? Okay? And the first segment we're talking
about the political related infrastructure that's been put together ahead
of a presidential confirmation. Another area where we need developments
was mainstream scientific engagement, which has been very difficult over
the last seventy years. As you imagine, there has been
(00:32):
some but of late it's getting much more prevalent. But
in the case of Beatros Villol it's something else. So
what is going on here is he is a doctor scientist.
It works for the Nordic Institute of Astrophysics, what a name,
(00:52):
all of that name. It's in Sweden where they give
out Nobel Prize. And what she did was what I
call elegance science. There is deep, deep science that people
will get into and they come up with amazing things
such as quantum theory and what have you, and they
often get Nobel Prizes. But you can get a Nobel
Prize for doing not deep physics, but rather elegant physics
(01:17):
that happens to do something no one had done and
has enormous implications, and that's exactly what they did. The
program is called VASCO and it they examined thousands of
astro photography plates that were taken back before we put
any of satellites up and I think a few years
(01:42):
later because there were almost no stlespary years. They looked
at them and what they discovered was clear instances where
an object was in the shot this particular area of space,
and then later that exact area was filmed again and
the object wasn't there. And I think there were some
(02:03):
instances where it was there in a success couple of
plate successions, and then the third one it was not there.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Well it this wasn't an asteroid show. I mean by
either was it?
Speaker 3 (02:16):
Well, the chance of having you know, by the way
they found thousands of these instances. But so the chance
of catching an asteroid just happens to be passing by
is there. It could happen thousands of times, not a chance.
And then when you've got two plates and then it
goes away in the third one, and so essentially, and
(02:37):
now it's been pay reviewed twice and it's going to
get more peer reviews. I assure you if it holds up.
What that is an absolute elegant at confirmation queed paced
closed that we're not alone because we couldn't have put
those things up there, somebody else did. They're not natural,
(02:58):
therefore they are created. Case closed. Now it gets better
because all of those plates were carefully dated and so
they were to do correlations between when they were seeing
these objects which were there and then not there, and
the time when they happened and what did they get
a fort correlation to the testing of our nuclear weapons. Now,
(03:22):
you know, I've talked on your show many times about
how that is probably the most important issue regarding the
et presence here. They have shut down on nuclear weapons
numerous times. They shut down Soviet nuclear ICBMs, they turned
them on, they put them into launch mode there and
in the US, and the witnesses are ready to testify
before Congress tomorrow. They had no qualms. We've been working
(03:45):
very hard to make that happen. The lead witness, Robert Sallas,
has met with Eric Burson, He's met with Nancy Mace,
and all the information about him and other nuclear shutdown
witnesses has been made available to all of the Tests
Horse members and the entire Senate Intel Committee. I believe
there's an excellent chance that they will testify next So wow,
(04:10):
that is what they have created. I think it's a
Nobel prize. She and our collaborator should have a Nobel
Prize delegant physics. Nobody had done it, and it's so
beautifully confirms a non human presence other than us out there.
So that is a perfect example of scientific infrastructure. However,
(04:32):
there's another area where we need things to happen head
of presidential confirmation, and that's the West Coach, particularly Los Angeles.
I think you're familiar with it. So what am I
talking about here? Okay, Look, the film industry, the content
creating industry, is critical to this no shock there, and
so we needed that industry to create hundreds and hundreds
(04:55):
of sci fi movies with exit testers so that the
idea of exit dress it's become normalized, not in the
United States but worldwide, nice, naughty, whatever the hell, it
didn't matter, well sick. But then we needed something else.
We needed the high end industry to get into the
nonfiction documentary approach to this issue, and they wouldn't do it.
(05:20):
Decades would go by. They simply would not go there.
So we made our own docs, right, We used our money,
got some equipment it gets cheaper every year, and made
our own I say we my colleagues that you know
they are Ron James, James Fox, Oh, there's so many,
Darcy and many others made our own docks and they're
(05:42):
all over and you can see them on streaming. But
they never got theatrical distribution. They never got the screaming,
and they also didn't have that gravitas and production value
and so forth. Well that's changed by not that long ago.
JJ Robbins totally a list big time does a nonfit
documentary series called UFO. Not after that, not long after that,
(06:04):
Steven Spielberg remember him, He does a non fiction series
called Encounters. But we're still missing that one piece, and
that is a documentary on this subject a high end
top equipment, major Hollywood people involve big screen or at
(06:25):
least of screens, right, and that is about to take place.
I'm referring to the Age of Disclosure, a documentary directed
written by Dan Harra that is going to premiere after
a year after it had an opening the south By
Southwest Film Festival, second largest I think in the country.
It's going to premiere in three cities, La, New York, Wasshington,
(06:49):
d C. They're not huge theaters, but they're nice, they're fun,
but they are sufficient that this documentary could get a
Oscar nomination the first instance of that. And it may
get that Oscar nomination. All right. The documentary is a
powerful political hammer directed right at the truth and bargo.
(07:12):
It may not have lots of exotic breadlines and so forth,
but it is high quality made with high end people,
proper funding. Thirty four individuals just literally hammering away at
the truth embargo with one comment after another. It is
going to have great impact. And so now we've got
(07:32):
that check. But then other stuff, right, For instance, it
for celebrities, actors, musicians to step into the issue and
speak openly. We got that sec dozens have done that.
Every week somebody knew joins the fray. I think the actress,
oh my lord, Demi Moore just stepped in, all right,
(07:55):
and next month it'll be somebody else. We got it checked.
But we also need to engage the industry in a broadway,
which is why Dan haw Ari and I founded the
Hollywood Disclosure Alliance, which in two years has really blossomed
to become the nonprofit pree networking entity that it is.
(08:20):
We've got two hundred and forty members, half for Hollywood members,
that's content industry, half for UAP members. People that have
focused on this issue in their life in all kinds
of different ways, would like to make contexts. We created
this thing so that they can easily network with each other.
And it is happening. It is really moving forward. Very
pleased you and your producer Tom dan Heiser are in it,
(08:40):
and we're very grateful for that. But then it's starting
to spawn other stuff. So because of the Hollywood Disclosure Alliance,
Dan Ari, who is a longtime Hollywood publisher, created the
wow Signal News at the Wowsignal dot News, which has
grown exponentially in just an a few months. It's getting
(09:01):
out great content. It has three hundred thousand emails direct
emails and it's able to get to and seven hundred
thousand through extended social media. And so you're seeing it
all come together in Hollywood as well. You put all
that together, George, and I'm saying the President could walk
(09:22):
out tomorrow, step up to a microphone, announce the et presence,
and everybody go about time and we get in the
post disposure world. So five years never going to happen. Sorry,
I'm not on board with it.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
If there's going to be a president to do it,
it could be this one.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
There's nothing to stop him, and one could imagine there
are some benefits that might come if he were to
make this announcement. It will be the most important political
act probably ever. It will get global accolades. Other heads
of state will follow behind very quickly. This is trivial.
And I should also add that there are other heads
(10:03):
of state that could do this, because as this issue
gets closer and closer, another head of state may step
in and go well disclosed, provide the information, and our
president will be second. And in this business or this realm,
you get nothing for second. So my preference would be
to have our president be the one that ends this
(10:24):
trip and barble.
Speaker 2 (10:25):
How much of this administration do you think knows what's
going on?
Speaker 3 (10:31):
A great deal? Look for every member of Congress that
has stepped forward and spoken right to the issue, like
Tim Burchett is he said there's EPCRE. I don't know how
many times many others. There's five to ten that are
not coming forward. But they're on it, they're watching it,
but they're not ready to step forward public which is
(10:51):
why this is one of the reasons why the Age
of Disclosure, which by the way, got this enormous intro
because being done. Pharah is a very significant person in
Hollywood with connections and agents. He got pulled onto the
Real Time with Bill maherk back on October thirty one.
Ten minute open interview went fantastic, All the right questions
(11:14):
were asked and was great, and it was Bill Mahr
that brought up the shutting down of nuclear weapons. Wow.
Then he appeared on their after show Overtime, which goes
on the net. Look, that show is one of the highest,
if not the highest, I'm talking about a Real Time
on Netflix in terms of total views millions. The Overtime
(11:38):
online segment afterwards goes on their YouTube channels have two
point three million subscribers, and then it also airs on
the show follows up on CNN. Usually it's about a
million viewers. So on the thirty first, twenty one days
before this show is going to premiere in those three theaters,
huge numbers of people are learning about it from you know,
(12:01):
someone like Bill Maher who was actually positive about the
issue a couple of years ago is negative. And so
this is building. Okay, you know I'm not you know,
I tend to be over confident. I tend to, but
I'm just saying, George, this is building. You need to
get ready for how you're going to run your show
with the post disposure air. It's going to be great,
(12:22):
right the first guest we established that.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
Yes, you'll be the man.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
You deserve it.
Speaker 2 (12:27):
You've put in so much time and effort. What do
you think of these witnesses who have come before Congress?
What are your thoughts?
Speaker 3 (12:34):
Zeroes? All of them? They haven't had an easy time.
There has been pushback from the DoD or, the managers
of the Truths and gargo, phone calls, maybe the odd email,
some stupid articles put in Washington, I mean the Wall
Street Journal, h and so it hasn't been easy for them.
(12:55):
They've done. I believe there may be a couple of
There may be a couple and the dozens and dozens
that have come forward that may prove problematic, but overall
these are pretty much all men, I believe at this point. Well, no, no,
In terms of testimony and hearings, they're just trying to
get the truth out. But they're also obeying the law.
They're not violating their clearances. The stuff that they put
(13:18):
out or right go through dopser and when you have
a book. In other words, they're trying to be responsible.
Is still get this out. They deserve nothing but praise.
They are heroes. Other witnesses are a little more timid.
It's been a little awkward lately, and so one of
the things we need in the UAP Disposure Act may
be a little more witness protection. But as things move forward,
(13:39):
I think they're going to become more comfortable. I think
the age of disclosure is going to make it easier
for some of these witnesses to say, look, I'm ready
to testify. And so once again the pieces are there,
and there are thousands of potential witnesses going down the line,
but we don't need that many. We just need enough
testimony to go into the congressional record and all the
(14:02):
other things I've mentioned to set the stage for a
presidential confirmation. And I must remind your listening, all your
hearing and seeing rather is not about here. We're going
to get you the information, like oh, let's listen to
the hearings. We're going to learn about this. We're going
to learn about that. This is not about getting the
information out. It is about getting enough things done and
(14:25):
information out to set up for confirmation for disclosure capital D.
It's after disclosure that we're gonna got all that stuff
that people are wanting. Now, they just don't understand this
is a process leading to capital D disclosure and then
that leads to full blown small ddisclosure and those that
(14:45):
are wanting when's the next witness is going to tell
me about his meeting with an ET. Now that's not
what's happening. And it's frustrating, and I know people get irritated,
but ultimately it's going to go where they want.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
To go once disclosure happens. Steven, what did Stephen Bassett
do a year later?
Speaker 3 (15:05):
A year later? Sure, Look it's easy to say what
I'll do right away. I'm gonna party and I'm gonna
do your show. Okay. Look I got in this issue
not to make a career out of serving. I didn't
get it to make money, and I'm sure you succeeded
in that regard, but to serve this issue because it's
an unbelievable opportunity to be involved in something that I
(15:26):
couldn't did imagine.
Speaker 1 (15:29):
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