Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
So imagine if you could X ray scan two kilometers
down on the entire Earth, essentially passively from space, and
then think of the repercussions. I think we just see
amazing changes in our archaeological history. We'd understand what's underneath
Goe Beeckley Tepe. We could see into S four. You
(00:23):
imagine that area fifty one are bab Azar's claims actually correct.
So it's very exciting, and that's what's being claimed by
Felipo Biondi. This is him with Armando May in a
very recent briefing that he gave in Malta. So it's
an hour and a half briefing on Project Unity. Channel
(00:44):
link is in the description. I recommend you guys check
it out. But they talk about a way to listen
to Earth from space. We'll talk about that, talk about
tomographic inversion, how he went from his garage the laboratory
actually using it, about some examples and gave some new
information as well as the water table, So how can
(01:05):
you tell where the water table is? And he answered
some pointed questions from the crowd. So welcome to the channel.
Chris Lado retired a F sixteen pilot and decades ago.
I used SAR technology actually in the f sixteen, so
it was a military technology, so I have some experience
(01:26):
with it. And in this video I want to go
through what are exactly the claims that the Italian scientists
are making. Does it break the laws of physics? You know,
could it even be possible? And then if it is possible,
what are the implications? And I think they're pretty profound.
We really could be looking at the biggest archaeological find
(01:48):
or change in our lots in a generation, so it
really is amazing. The implications are amazing, and the technology
seems to be so lucrative that if it does work,
and he's basically shown open source kind of how to
do the method, if it does work, then I don't
think there's any way this can be kept secret. It's
just too lucrative for oil and gas, for bridge safety,
(02:12):
for building safety, for looking into volcanoes. I think there's
just too many uses for this technology. I mean, imagine
if you could X ray the entire Earth down to
two kilometers, that's with pretty high precision, So that's just
an amazing technology. It would be a huge breakthrough. So
it's very exciting and I think it will come out.
(02:32):
If it is true, I think we'll know in the
next year, I think Chris later. Welcome to Lado Files,
so thanks for being here. Please hit the like button
if you do like this content and consider subscribing. Let's
(02:53):
get to the video. So in mid March twenty twenty five,
engineers from the Coprey project presented essentially science breaking SAR
scans of the Giza plateau. Initially it was completely rejected
by the scientific community, but it was a huge press conference.
There was seven hundred people. It was on Expedition Nicole
(03:16):
Cucolo's YouTube channel, so basically a small YouTube channel. But
Filipo BEYONDI, Armando May and Corota Malonga presented for four
hours essentially and the initial press conference was in Italian,
so that was a little difficult. But now with subtitles
you could read it in English and there's Filipo BEYONDI
(03:39):
right there talking about several examples, and to me it
was quite compelling. And so from this new technology that
they say is SAR tomography that will go through in
the video, they claimed that they can analyze up to
one point two kilometers below the pyramids, and they say
(03:59):
there are all these pillars so eight pillars below the
Kafra pyramid, that's the one in the middle called the
Chinese pyramid. But there's eight pillars going down six hundred
and forty eight meters, they say, with these spiral structures
on the side, and they lead down to these two
large rooms that are basically eighty meters cube, and they
(04:21):
even have in here basically the water table. And so
initial arguments against this or debunking claims for that, Hey,
you know woodn't water stop this anyway, like, how can
you see below a water table? In the recent hour
and a half conference that BEYONDI made, he basically answers
his claim, So we'll cover that in this video as well. Okay,
(04:42):
so what exactly are they claiming? So basically, BEYONDI says
he and his team, but it sounds like just him
created a new technique to image underground structures from space
using synthetic aperture radar. Son aperture radar is you synthetically
(05:03):
enlarge the aperture right, the aperture is the receiver. So
if you imagine a giant radar dish, right, the larger
you can make your dish, the more accurate you can
make your resolution, the bigger waves you can pick up.
So in the F sixteen we flew off angle from
the target, and over time you keep hitting the target
with radar energy from different angles, and effectively you turn
(05:24):
your little tiny F sixteen radar into a really big, long,
giant synthetic aperture radar, and you're able to image targets
from many miles away, so longer than you can with
a targeting pod. And this technology has only improved, so
now they use it on bombers and etc. So it's
(05:46):
a military technology. You can't be pointed right at the target.
You actually have to be off target so that you
can increase the aperture of your radar over time. And
so that's beyond these argument is if you use satellites
in orbit, they're up at six hundred kilometers, they're going
very fast, and then you can get many, many time
(06:07):
slices of the same point on the ground. What you
can do is expand your aperture to make it enormous.
You have a giant synthetic aperture, and now you can
sense he's arguing, with new analyzing techniques, he can actually
sense tiny little micro vibrations in the ground effectively listening,
(06:30):
so it's acoustic. He talks about photon to phoneon. So
essentially you're using electromagnetic radiation as a needle on a turntable.
And he has a great analogy here with a turntable,
so listen to how he explains it.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
We found also that there is a fault on faulton
phone on interaction because everything that is transmit the weak
electromagnetic energy and the interaction with the matter. This interaction
we produce as yes, excatric energy inside through receiver of
(07:08):
the radiar, but CAD so the production of physical vibrations. Okay,
that is very important. So we have.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
We have designed.
Speaker 4 (07:24):
To transform the information that has a light nature.
Speaker 5 (07:32):
Elect and electromagnetic nature into.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
Vibrations.
Speaker 4 (07:41):
So this is a vinyl reader here that that I
am very interested in beings in this case, the electromagnetic
transmissions are can be associated to this device here and
(08:01):
the v mean that ter answer is the Earth.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
Okay, I thought that was a great analogy. So what
he's claiming is that they're using electromagnetic waves from space
to act like the needle sensing the micro vibrations from
the ground. So the amazing point is this isn't new physics, right,
So we use seismography to analyze earthquakes and to see
(08:26):
what's actually under the ground, what the earth is actually
made up of. We use ultrasound technology, right. I'm sure
you've seen that if you had a child. We do
use acoustic information to actually get high precision maps inside materials, right,
And we also use electromagnetic waves to pick up acoustic waves.
(08:48):
If you've ever heard of laser vibrometry, talked about it
in a previous video. But that's basically during the Cold War,
they could shoot a laser at a window and actually
listen to what's being said in inside the room. And
that's why you don't see any windows in skiffs, right,
sensitive compartmentalized information facilities, So that's why secret rooms don't
(09:10):
have windows. Okay, you could also read people's lips, but
even then you can actually use this device, so the
general physics is possible. I guess what the experts have
an issue with is the level you know, how accurate
is this technology? Can they get that level of precision
because normal ground penetrating radar can only see like maybe
(09:32):
maybe twenty thirty meters at the most, you know, more
likely fifteen to thirty feet and so this would be
definitely a breakthrough, but does it actually break physics. I
don't think it actually breaks physics. That's why I'm so
excited about it. So I made this little animation to
try and explain it a little better. So they're claiming
that saur radar vibrations below the surface allow you to
(09:53):
build tomograms from orbit. So he says, the turntable, the
needle picks up micro vibrations in the roof, so imagine
how accurate the sound is. And so now what he's
arguing is sar radar beam on Earth does the same thing.
It's detecting underground vibrations. So the Earth isn't turning, but
it is moving up and down slightly, so instead of
(10:14):
bouncing off deep rock as GPR does, the radar picks
up tiny surface vibrations. And these vibrations they act like
a moving turntable, creating a three D image a radar tomogram.
And so I think this could be the future of
non invasive technology, I mean archaeology, oil and gas exploration,
(10:37):
and I'm sure it has serious implications for military and
defense technology. So Flipo goes into even more detail about
how they can pick up underground patterns essentially in the
acoustic vibrations. And more importantly, it goes through how he
actually came up with the technique because a lot of
experts don't believe it. So here he realizes pretty interesting
(11:01):
how he came up with it. And of course it
started with just a dude in his garage. So check
this out.
Speaker 5 (11:06):
Our technique it is. It is extremely oriented. The two
science began in laborator.
Speaker 4 (11:18):
This is my.
Speaker 3 (11:18):
Garage and I show you that theresa some wine.
Speaker 4 (11:22):
Yeah, but it's here.
Speaker 3 (11:27):
We have some mess and all that is inside my garage.
Speaker 1 (11:31):
It's funny because I lived in Italy. I was at
Avion Air base for three years, and we would buy
those big jugs of wine. You could get a five
liter jug of wine for like if I remember, it
was like ten ten euro to fill up that thing.
And they filled him up with a little gas pump
of wine. So that's that's funny. It would go bad
though after a while after you opened it.
Speaker 3 (11:53):
So we did as simulation. We started the froma some water,
a camera and the computer, and here we have it.
It's a manage of the our satellite and then we
have this is the earth. We have some let's call
(12:20):
some space where we don't have matter, so matter not
matter and matter and here we have. This is the vibration,
the generator, and this is the camera that catches the images.
And so we are began. We began to start. We
began to perform vibrations. No, and these vibrations put the
(12:47):
water into motion. Where this motion we recorded this motion.
So this is the road data of the vibration. And
this road data has been focus in order to redrive
the picture of what dicks underneath, so we can recline
(13:08):
the shape of the table, the shape of the table,
and this dis that us on these attack.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
I think this is extremely important because you can have
all the theory you want, right, but observation and experiment
totally trump's scientific theory. I mean this has always been
the case, no matter what you want to believe with
your theory, if you can do it in the real world,
then it works, right, and then they have to update
the theory. That's that's what's always happened before. So Felipo
(13:44):
basically shows right there that they tested in the garage,
and I think he used that to develop the algorithms,
right the method, and then he says that they then
brought the technique to space and then did the same
technique with this tunnel. So this was a a tunnel
in Italy, so basically using the technique, they can clearly
(14:05):
see the tunnel. So that's why it's so compelling to me.
This is a new example. Actually, when he originally presented
at the conference on the fifteenth, he went through some
other examples, the Grand Sasu Physics Laboratory, which he also
goes through again in this presentation. He goes through Mosul
Dam again in this presentation, but this is a new one,
(14:29):
the Carlon Tunnel. I hadn't heard of this one, so
another example. And then finally he goes through the Osiris
shaft and he went through that as well on the
initial conference, but that was towards the end. I think
a lot of people missed it. And the most powerful
example for me is the Grand Sassu Physics Laboratory, and
so in this conference briefing, Felipo spends another ten minutes
(14:54):
on it and really explains explains about it. So the
physics laboratory is designed to detect neutrinos, so it's under
at least one point four kilometers of rock, so it's
way under all this rock. And Felipa shows that they're
able to actually using SAR scan tomography able to scan
(15:18):
and identify the actual physics laboratory, so the little structures,
the buildings, the tunnels inside the physics laboratory. And so
I don't know how experts scientists can claim that this
doesn't work. I guess they just claim that he's lying,
or because he knew it was in there, he was
able to just pick out what he wanted. You know
that he's manually selecting the exact pixels, but it seems
(15:43):
very compelling when you can clearly see, you know, like
this triangle shape complex of rooms underground. I don't know
is he just selecting that manually. So again, experiment and
observation is going to trump theory all day. So you
can theorize all you want, but if you can do
it with an experiment and it's repeatable, then it's going
(16:06):
to be proven true. And that's why I think this
is so powerful, is that if it's correct, and it
certainly looks like it could be, it's very compelling that
it will be proven true in the next year maybe sooner.
Cause Flippo also goes through examples for bridge issues, so
he says, in a famous bridge, they could actually detect
(16:27):
weaknesses in the bridge, So you could use this for
safety to see if a bridge will possibly collapse. You know,
if you can actually X ray into the bridge and
see a little crack, you can see that it's broken
and something could happen. Thought that was super interesting. Another
point is it does vibrational analysis. So the way the
technology works as well is it can pick up power lines,
(16:51):
so it can pick up power generation through the air.
I'm not sure exactly how that works, if it's through
electromagnetic interactions or if they're small vibrate in the wire,
but basically you could pick up if power lines are
working in a certain area, and that also explains I've
gotten comments on previous videos asking well, why didn't they
find the gis of tunnels using this technology if it
(17:14):
is a secret military technology, if you will, because I've
argued that if it does exist, it's possible. Most likely
the military does know about it and uses it. And
as we saw right, there is electromagnetic interference, so power
lines or any vibration on the ground I think will interfere.
So if you have like a bustling city, I don't
(17:35):
think you're going to be able to scan below a
bustling city. I think it'll have too much noise on
the surface, whereas on the Giza Plateau it's just totally
flat out there. There's not much out there. So I
think that's why you can get clear scans into the
Grand Sasu Physics Laboratory, into mountains, into bridges, you know,
(17:55):
as long as there's not cars going over them. So, yeah,
do want to hide your secret underground bunkers? He might
want to put, you know, a city or base on
the top of it. And in the briefing, Filipo spent
quite a bit of time on the Osiri's shaft. So
Jeff from Land to Kim was asking some interesting point
of questions basically about shafts leading into the Osiber's shaft
(18:19):
from somewhere else that they could tell where that is
or what's below the Osiber's shaft. Answered, you know the
dark red images you see there, the dark red parts
is really where there's high intensity energy, is what Filipo said.
So he says there's probably a room way down there,
or several rooms Filipo also went into more detail on
(18:44):
the scan pyramids north face corridor. I thought this was
probably the most compelling example, and he said that there
is actually a room down here. So he says, at
the end of the corridor, what you'll see is a room,
predicting that if they just extend the corridor of that
north faced corridor, you know, dig it out, excavate it further,
(19:06):
they will find a room. And so there's many ways
to validate this technology actually works. So that's what's so amazing.
And so Jeff asked about the water table. I thought
this was really interesting. And as they talk about the
spirals here, the best example he said for the water
table was they predict you'll see an attenuation, so you'll
(19:29):
see less energy. So if you notice here about halfway
down the scans, you have a ton of energy up here,
you know, on the upper half of the scans, and
then there's a decrease in actual acoustical energy, so it
acts like a dampener. And so he said, this is
probably where the water table is. So what you're seeing
is the water table here. And now they're still picking
(19:51):
up information below the water table, but it's less it's
effectively been dampened by the water and the water table.
I thought that was really interesting. So again another prediction,
and they can validate if the technology works by just
you know, digging down and seeing, okay, do you hit
the water table at this depth? I mean again, that
(20:11):
would be another amazing validation. And this is where you
can really see it he's talking about. So basically the
water table is going to be right there, so high
energy uppere acoustic and then lower below the water table,
and he mentions Sabine. It calls Sabina Sabine Haussenfelder, and
(20:32):
Felipo is still upset about Sabine Hassenfelder calling their work
nine out of ten on the bullshit meter. So she
says it's probably bullshit, but it could be theoretically possible.
So she has no actual physical means to say it's
not possible, just that it sounds not possible. It would
be an amazing breakthrough, So probably nine out of ten
(20:53):
doesn't exist, just bullshit, and Felipo's not not impressed with that,
so he mentions Sabina a couple times in this briefing
and I can't blame them. And then the final big
point that I took out of this new briefing is
they're predicting a ton of other shafts or holes in
(21:14):
the Giza plateau. So Filipo said, these are known shafts.
Trevor Grossi, who I interviewed on the Channel, has been
on the Giza plateau and seeing all these shafts. They're
basically just filled in, but just holes in the plateau.
And Felipo's saying that what they saw from the scan
is all of these other areas also have just hundreds,
(21:35):
if you will, of tiny shafts. So again he's predicting
many other shafts on the Giza plateau. And if it
aligns with their scans, right, if you just go to
that location and start digging and look down, then you'll
see all these shafts in it. Again, there's another way
to validate the technique. So that's what good science is, right,
(21:56):
It's reproducible. It makes predictions, so you can falsify or
validate the technology, like right away, just go and look
where the shafts are they there and if they are,
then it again another validation of this technique. So just
amazing stuff, but we still have to be clear right,
(22:17):
this is an amazing new claim. The experts are not
accepting it. This has always happened in the past, though
with amazing new claims, experts didn't accept it. It doesn't
break the laws of physics, Okay, it's just more advanced technique.
The results are what's unbelievable. You know that you can
actually scan below the Giza Plateau and not just that
(22:39):
that you see these just amazing structures. So this would
just completely rewrite our understanding of the Pyramids, the Giza Plateau,
ancient history. I mean, it's going to rewrite human history essentially.
The Pyramids is one of the great mysteries of our
time that, along with UAPs, I think, and they may
(22:59):
even belated. That's why I'm so interested. I think they
are related. So if you can, I mean imagine, you
could solve the Great Pyramids right, what they are, what
they were actually used for, because I'm pretty sure they
weren't used for tombs, you know, when they were actually
built by who in Egypt? You know, there's no record
of them ever being built. And they even say in
(23:22):
this press conference that it would basically refute the claim
that the Pyramids were even made by COFRAY and CUFU.
So just amazing claims. And yes, as people say, extraordinary
claims require extraordinary evidence. But if this technique works, then
it will be proven true or falsified, right, because it's
(23:44):
just way too valuable. Imagine if you could use this
technique to scan all of the oil and gas fields
across the world. What if you can scan Gobecley Tepe
Mountain em Root, so it really could rewrite history. And
then if you're talking about UAPs, now you can actually
scans four right, are their hangers in there as Bob
(24:07):
Lasar claimed? Can we now verify or at least cross
check Bob Lasar's claims that there's so many hangers inside
of S four in the side of a mountain? And
now what will the government do? You know, will they
freak out?
Speaker 5 (24:22):
Now?
Speaker 1 (24:22):
Will they try and stop this technology? You know, will
they try and stop those areas from being SAR scanned?
Or can you It seems like the information is already
out there, someone's already SAR scanned, and now satellites are
going to be just cheaper and cheaper to implement, right
to put out and start having them picking up SAR
data And you're not gonna be able to stop China
from using this technique. So I think it's just going
(24:44):
to make a huge impact if it's proven out true,
and the scientists certainly aren't stepping down. So Flipo BEYONDI,
Armando May they will be a cosmic summit this weekend.
I was supposed to have Fleepo on the show twice.
Now he had to cancel once for personal reasons another time.
I think he's just too busy coming up with patents
and building these press conferences and briefings. But hopefully I
(25:06):
will get them on the show in July and we'll
see what happens. You also have in September. I believe
they are going to Dubai and Zahi Hawas will be
there with Felipo BEYONDI as well as they have other
press conferences schedule for November, et cetera. So there's way
more information coming out about this, and it really seems
(25:26):
like it could be a legitimate, serious technological breakthrough. And
imagine being able to solve the Pyramids mystery of the Pyramids, man,
that is amazing. And then if you could X ray
two kilometers down into the earth, how much we'll learn
about ancient history all over the world. I would love
to see go Beckley Tepe. You know, supposedly just five
(25:47):
percent of that ancient site has even been excavated, so
what's the other ninety five percent look like? You know
what's underneath there as well as all the other tepe
as a hill all around there as well as mountain.
So really exciting stuff, exciting breakthroughs. Let me know what
you guys think, and consider subscribing to get future notifications.
(26:10):
Hit the like button it does help, and share the
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Chris Lato or become a YouTube member like all these
fine people. Thank you so much for your support. I'll
try and do a better job of making it worth
your while on those venues, but thanks again. Exciting times.
(26:30):
Have a great rest of your day.
Speaker 3 (26:31):
Peace,