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Have you met anybody working on the crafts themselves?

Kevin Knuth, this is an absolute honor, and it's been a long time coming.

You're a physicist at the University of Albany, and to me, you are one of the few people who

The genitals removed.

I mean, I don't know how many people can actually sit in that room, but it was well over the

fire limit, right?

his father was actually working at Malmstrom Base.

And they all see tic-tacs, saucers, orbs, you know, shutting down nukes.

And I was like, all right, that makes sense.

You mentioned on Danny Jones that you've had various friends work on anti-gravity and receive

sort of backlash-

They get threatened threats and things like that, yeah, too.

That's very strange, yeah.

What do you think that is with the anti-gravity stuff?

I really have no idea.

I mean, I, you know, you can jump to conclusions and say, well, because somebody doesn't want

other people discovering things that they know about and have control over.

I mean, you could jump to that conclusion, but I don't, I don't actually know what the

It's hard to tell.

Doesn't that feel like the base case conclusion?

Like, if you're, if somebody's getting threatened over discovering a thing, um, it would seem

like there'd be some group on the inside that would be tracking people trying to discover

a thing that they're already aware of, right?

Like, that seems like the Occam's razor easy explanation.

Yeah, I mean, it leads to a whole sets of conspiracy theories, right?

And it's, it's difficult.

I've done deep dives on this guy, like Townsend Brown, who I'm really fascinated with.

And I, I talk about him probably too much for the audience always laughs when I talk, but,

but, you know, I, I find him to be really interesting because I do think he made breakthroughs in the

I've got stacks of books I want to read and things I want to look at.

And it's just, you have to pick and choose.

So then, but then the other problem is power.

If you look at energies and power involved, the, the amount of power for that Tic Tac dropping

So in most of the things we make are like 20% efficient at best.

So the water molecules are bouncing off this thing, but it's not interacting with the water

Uh, and I don't have any, I have a little bit of evidence that Townsend Brown might've

Well then, well, we can, uh, people are going to look it up.

He's a university of Alabama Huntsville.

He was the physics chair and under him was a woman named Ning Li.

And it's talking about Townsend Brown.

And I'm like, okay, what's going on?

Right outside of the frame. Did he say that?

I don't remember that. Yeah.

kind of variable for UFO transport. Do you want to explain that?

Yeah. Well, there's a few. Yeah. So it has two aspects. The first one is

spaceships. That's probably the easiest thing to do. Right. Or to colonize airless worlds like the moon,

which is no different than staying in your spaceship. But then the other option is to

tear in the sky, I think came out in 2023, something like that. And our scientific paper

Um, but Matthew is the one who figured out it was the space station. He put it all together and he

actually took the pixel size on the camera. And then, um, knowing the altitude of the space station,

drop and hit the water in infrared. Whoa. Um, you get that on video?

No, no, I was just looking through the goggles, watching for things and, um,

try different things. Is there a best sensor modality if you're trying to spot UFOs?

I think as many sensors as you can. Is there one, say you had to pick one

and first, I don't remember all the events and several things happened. They actually saw several

UFOs first, these rectangular things show up in front of the ship and have these lights that go up

chief of accidents and investigations actually reviewed the case. And then Reagan, President

Reagan's scientific team and the CIA showed up and they wanted all the data.

ET to the White House. We really enjoyed your movie. And then he looked around the room,

He, I believe they had like an observation program going on in Alaska. And then just recently you had,

Oppenheimer gave him a sidearm and had him babysit the bomb up in the tower during a thunderstorm.

was the chief scientific advisor to president Johnson, who was president during the Kecksburg

crash. And I found, I had actually found a document about the Kecksburg UFO and Donald

the Kecksburg crash. He was the, um, I believe president of Penn state and he was kind of a

material science guy. I don't know if you know anything about him, but he's an interesting

military bases and nearby population centers, and the nuclear sites have more, you know, in the early

see that are observed by people are actually coming from earth presently, you know, Carl Sagan once

quipped, I think it's extremely doubtful that somebody is arriving from international, from

interstellar space every other Tuesday. You know, he made something like that, you know, basically

saying that I don't think that he didn't say interest dollar travels impossible. It wasn't going to

happen every other Tuesday is basically what he was saying. It's not going to be common. And I think he's

right. They're not, they're not coming in from another star system every other Tuesday. They're,

they're present here. Yeah. And that's why I think there's probably bases underwater is your best bet.

Yeah. Or maybe somewhere else in the solar system. But we know that they can't be more than,

in many cases, they can't be more than a light day away because they showed up the next, so when you had

the Fukushima disaster, they showed up the next day. So if they're coming from another star system,

it would take years for the, for the, any signal, any information about Fukushima to get out to that

star system and then years for them to come, for them to come. Unless fast and light communications

light that seems to be falling. But it's a red flashing light in space. Nobody, nobody puts lights

on satellites. First, you don't need them. And second, it's more weight. You know, every, every ounce is

of unidentified things, you should talk about them.

So totally. But also apparently the uncorrelated targets are systematically tracked by space force.

of their speeds up to 19 kilometers a second, which is about 40,000 miles an hour.

He also says that the rocket program was helped and he was, he was basically the father of

German rocketry.

But that, so that's, that's going back to 19, so 1954, we knew that these things traveled

So we have, we have this, um, this Simpkinson NASA UFO archive and this photo, which is like,

I mean, several of us were trying to identify stars and things like this in that picture,

and you just can't do it.

and they did a tether experiment where they actually got the two crafts spinning like this,

I'm going to knock things over, got the two crafts spinning on a tether, and then, um,

I don't think so.

But in fact, they can be shepherded into, you know, in some ways they can be shepherded even more easily because they think they're so smart.

They think they can't be tricked or something.

And is there anything you'd like to plug or anything the audience can help kind of promote or support that helps you out?

Well, our work at UAlbany would be great to support.

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