1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:05,280 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio, PAN. 2 00:00:05,320 --> 00:00:07,680 Speaker 2: Welcome back to Coast to Coast. George Noory with you, 3 00:00:07,800 --> 00:00:11,399 Speaker 2: Ryan would with us as we talk about his latest works. Ryan, 4 00:00:11,440 --> 00:00:14,240 Speaker 2: we had Paula Harrison yesterday and she just thinks the 5 00:00:14,280 --> 00:00:14,840 Speaker 2: world of you. 6 00:00:17,239 --> 00:00:19,800 Speaker 3: That's great. I appreciate the applause. 7 00:00:20,320 --> 00:00:24,880 Speaker 2: Tell people Majestic guys, only tell people about the documents 8 00:00:24,880 --> 00:00:25,480 Speaker 2: if you would. 9 00:00:26,600 --> 00:00:33,000 Speaker 3: Yeah. People need to realize that the Majestic Documents comprise 10 00:00:33,120 --> 00:00:38,000 Speaker 3: some thirty five hundred pages in total, and they first 11 00:00:38,000 --> 00:00:41,760 Speaker 3: started leaking in nineteen eighty four and sort of stopped 12 00:00:41,760 --> 00:00:47,720 Speaker 3: in the early two thousands, and then from seven different sources. 13 00:00:49,400 --> 00:00:55,600 Speaker 3: Some were undeveloped Triac's film, like the Eisenhewer Briefing document 14 00:00:56,520 --> 00:01:00,360 Speaker 3: for President Eisenhower at the time, and then the other 15 00:01:01,400 --> 00:01:06,679 Speaker 3: was the Special Operations Manual Extraterrestrial Entities Technology Recovering Disposal, 16 00:01:06,720 --> 00:01:10,959 Speaker 3: which is reprinted in my book as well as an appendix, 17 00:01:12,080 --> 00:01:19,680 Speaker 3: and then various other mail drops and mailings that came 18 00:01:19,760 --> 00:01:26,040 Speaker 3: to several other people, So they vary in quality and 19 00:01:26,520 --> 00:01:30,640 Speaker 3: the ability to authenticate them. But the most compelling one, 20 00:01:31,280 --> 00:01:34,280 Speaker 3: the one that's types that the one that has the 21 00:01:34,360 --> 00:01:38,120 Speaker 3: most detail and rich and verifiable information, and we've done 22 00:01:38,160 --> 00:01:44,400 Speaker 3: the most authentication work on is this Special Operations Manual 23 00:01:44,440 --> 00:01:48,560 Speaker 3: Extraterrestrial Entities Technology Recovering Disposal, which is a how to 24 00:01:48,720 --> 00:01:52,640 Speaker 3: manual field manual for officers to where to pick up 25 00:01:52,680 --> 00:01:56,080 Speaker 3: the where to pack and ship the bodies, where to 26 00:01:56,120 --> 00:02:00,160 Speaker 3: take the hardware, how to create a cover story, how 27 00:02:00,200 --> 00:02:04,400 Speaker 3: to deceive the press. Why are you doing this? It's 28 00:02:04,840 --> 00:02:09,920 Speaker 3: the descriptions of the Type one and Type two eves 29 00:02:10,080 --> 00:02:14,520 Speaker 3: or extraterstrial biological entities, So it's very, very detailed. 30 00:02:15,520 --> 00:02:18,520 Speaker 2: Do you believe we are heading towards disclosure? 31 00:02:20,840 --> 00:02:24,480 Speaker 3: Yes? I think so. The preponderance of the evidence keeps 32 00:02:25,200 --> 00:02:30,240 Speaker 3: piling up, and with the congressional hearings of last summer 33 00:02:31,360 --> 00:02:37,280 Speaker 3: definitely supported whistleblower testimony, and maybe more whistleblowers will come forward. 34 00:02:38,440 --> 00:02:41,640 Speaker 3: I think it's still you know, the truth will come 35 00:02:41,680 --> 00:02:49,160 Speaker 3: out in dribs and drabs, and it'll be it'll be 36 00:02:49,400 --> 00:02:53,120 Speaker 3: challenging for the government to be transparent or totally transparent. 37 00:02:53,480 --> 00:02:56,560 Speaker 3: I mean, they could start with briefings every month saying 38 00:02:56,639 --> 00:02:59,640 Speaker 3: you know, here's why we're keeping something secret. Here's what 39 00:02:59,639 --> 00:03:02,640 Speaker 3: we're telling you is why we're not telling you more. 40 00:03:03,360 --> 00:03:06,280 Speaker 3: I mean, there's loads of reasons to protect it, and 41 00:03:06,320 --> 00:03:11,040 Speaker 3: there's loads of reasons to be transparent about it. And 42 00:03:12,400 --> 00:03:16,480 Speaker 3: it's a conundrum for the for the government over our government, 43 00:03:16,520 --> 00:03:18,760 Speaker 3: and maybe less of a conunder of other governments. 44 00:03:18,960 --> 00:03:22,080 Speaker 2: Where can our listeners get the updated Magic Eye's Only book? 45 00:03:22,960 --> 00:03:27,080 Speaker 3: Well, it's it's on Amazon, both The ai Ufologist and 46 00:03:28,400 --> 00:03:33,320 Speaker 3: Magic m a j iic Eyes Only a Military Assessment 47 00:03:33,320 --> 00:03:38,040 Speaker 3: of the Joint Intelligence Committee. Magic It's on Amazon. You know, 48 00:03:39,040 --> 00:03:41,400 Speaker 3: you can get it there or you can sign up. 49 00:03:42,080 --> 00:03:44,960 Speaker 3: You can get it go to our website. There's links 50 00:03:45,000 --> 00:03:46,240 Speaker 3: to Amazon there too. 51 00:03:46,480 --> 00:03:49,680 Speaker 2: Well, you just released a new book called The ai Ufologists. 52 00:03:49,760 --> 00:03:50,840 Speaker 2: Tell us what this means. 53 00:03:51,880 --> 00:03:56,200 Speaker 3: Yeah, this was a fascination that I had with artificial intelligence. 54 00:03:56,240 --> 00:03:59,400 Speaker 3: So I decided for my business, I was doing a 55 00:03:59,440 --> 00:04:01,880 Speaker 3: lot of work with artificial intelligence, so I decided to 56 00:04:01,960 --> 00:04:09,720 Speaker 3: train chat GPT four with a corpus of UFO books 57 00:04:09,960 --> 00:04:15,360 Speaker 3: and knowledge that I had, and then I started asking 58 00:04:15,480 --> 00:04:20,159 Speaker 3: questions and sixteen hours later I was done with the book, 59 00:04:20,400 --> 00:04:24,120 Speaker 3: or the preparation of the contents. And it was really 60 00:04:24,160 --> 00:04:27,640 Speaker 3: the first question that you know, what's the et agenda? 61 00:04:27,720 --> 00:04:32,440 Speaker 3: Which is the classic question everybody has in their minds, 62 00:04:33,160 --> 00:04:36,279 Speaker 3: And the quality of the answer was so good that 63 00:04:36,400 --> 00:04:39,680 Speaker 3: I wrote another question, and then another and so forth, 64 00:04:40,360 --> 00:04:47,440 Speaker 3: and that was the preparation of the book. It's very 65 00:04:47,440 --> 00:04:53,039 Speaker 3: different in that it gets more and more complicated and 66 00:04:53,120 --> 00:04:56,640 Speaker 3: sophisticated around transparency in the government. Why should they tell 67 00:04:56,680 --> 00:04:59,560 Speaker 3: the truth? Why should they not? Oh, you know, is 68 00:04:59,800 --> 00:05:02,760 Speaker 3: what the messages of crop circles? That's a little orthogonal 69 00:05:02,839 --> 00:05:09,479 Speaker 3: to UFOs and crashes, but it goes on to what 70 00:05:09,560 --> 00:05:13,240 Speaker 3: were the messages of all the great contact ees? And 71 00:05:13,720 --> 00:05:18,039 Speaker 3: how do you resolve the challenges of the world into 72 00:05:18,080 --> 00:05:26,280 Speaker 3: a peaceful, more harmonious environment and uplift humanity. So it 73 00:05:26,320 --> 00:05:30,800 Speaker 3: made me, as somebody who studied ufology, that I'd say 74 00:05:30,800 --> 00:05:33,800 Speaker 3: at least thirty or fifty percent of the answers that 75 00:05:33,839 --> 00:05:37,919 Speaker 3: I got were surprising to me. 76 00:05:39,240 --> 00:05:41,640 Speaker 2: Were you impressed with the answers? 77 00:05:42,040 --> 00:05:45,160 Speaker 3: I was? I was? I was impressed. I was impressed 78 00:05:45,160 --> 00:05:48,159 Speaker 3: with the Now could I have come up with the answers 79 00:05:48,160 --> 00:05:50,920 Speaker 3: if I, you know, sat there and thought about it 80 00:05:51,240 --> 00:05:54,279 Speaker 3: for a long time. Not all of them, but maybe 81 00:05:54,279 --> 00:05:57,520 Speaker 3: a lot of them. But it was the stunning speed 82 00:05:57,760 --> 00:06:03,080 Speaker 3: with which you type in one question and within a minute. 83 00:06:03,520 --> 00:06:07,400 Speaker 3: You have it scrolling before you in the screen, you know, 84 00:06:07,720 --> 00:06:11,960 Speaker 3: in a very crisp way. It doesn't write pages and pages. 85 00:06:12,000 --> 00:06:17,240 Speaker 3: It writes paragraphs, and they're very bite sized and convenient 86 00:06:17,440 --> 00:06:18,360 Speaker 3: to absorb. 87 00:06:19,800 --> 00:06:24,440 Speaker 2: Of the thirty questions Ryan you asked the chat, is 88 00:06:24,480 --> 00:06:27,279 Speaker 2: there one question that just stood out as one of 89 00:06:27,279 --> 00:06:34,960 Speaker 2: your most profound questions? 90 00:06:35,320 --> 00:06:39,520 Speaker 3: Not really, Well, maybe the last question in the book, 91 00:06:39,560 --> 00:06:48,200 Speaker 3: which was what I thought was the most challenging. I'll 92 00:06:48,240 --> 00:06:52,800 Speaker 3: read it to you. I mean it's a little long, but. 93 00:06:51,640 --> 00:06:53,920 Speaker 2: It's the longest question of the group, right. 94 00:06:54,400 --> 00:06:57,480 Speaker 3: Yeah, I think it is right, and you have to 95 00:06:57,560 --> 00:07:03,880 Speaker 3: give artificial intelligence some contexts for it to think. So 96 00:07:03,920 --> 00:07:07,560 Speaker 3: it says what would be the impact on society? And 97 00:07:08,120 --> 00:07:11,760 Speaker 3: that's twenty nine I'm sorry, thirty last one? 98 00:07:11,840 --> 00:07:13,480 Speaker 2: These are the five main forces? 99 00:07:14,040 --> 00:07:17,600 Speaker 3: Yeah? What are the five main forces that are interconnected 100 00:07:18,120 --> 00:07:22,800 Speaker 3: driving global challenges? How are government debt and money economic 101 00:07:22,880 --> 00:07:27,200 Speaker 3: forces affecting this? How is the political and societal polarization 102 00:07:27,360 --> 00:07:32,400 Speaker 3: of the left and right mindset affecting actions influencing our future? 103 00:07:32,880 --> 00:07:38,040 Speaker 3: Compare and contrast the geopolitical attitudes, policies, and priorities of countries, 104 00:07:38,120 --> 00:07:40,640 Speaker 3: particularly the US and China. When it comes to the 105 00:07:40,680 --> 00:07:46,320 Speaker 3: planet's future evolution, Addressing climate change challenges and mitigation costs 106 00:07:46,320 --> 00:07:49,920 Speaker 3: will be a major global expense. How should equitable cost 107 00:07:49,920 --> 00:07:55,240 Speaker 3: sharing be devised? Technology progress and energy, artificial intelligence, and 108 00:07:55,320 --> 00:07:59,600 Speaker 3: biological sciences such as crisper? Are they the enablers of 109 00:07:59,640 --> 00:08:04,000 Speaker 3: a more peaceful planet with less war in humanity and poverty? 110 00:08:05,120 --> 00:08:12,800 Speaker 3: And that was the culmination of my my questions to it, 111 00:08:12,840 --> 00:08:15,280 Speaker 3: And it wrote, you know, another four or five pages, 112 00:08:16,920 --> 00:08:20,320 Speaker 3: and I found that interesting. 113 00:08:23,880 --> 00:08:25,920 Speaker 2: Where did it get its answers? 114 00:08:27,120 --> 00:08:32,679 Speaker 3: Well, it gets its answers from sort of two corpuses 115 00:08:32,720 --> 00:08:39,400 Speaker 3: of knowledge. One is the the books that I've fed it. 116 00:08:39,480 --> 00:08:44,520 Speaker 3: I mean I have a scan collection of UFO books 117 00:08:44,559 --> 00:08:48,479 Speaker 3: of like fifty books that are all scanned in OCR 118 00:08:49,040 --> 00:08:51,040 Speaker 3: and a variety of periodicals. 119 00:08:51,120 --> 00:08:54,479 Speaker 2: So electronically you sent it in a scan. 120 00:08:55,160 --> 00:08:59,199 Speaker 3: Yeah, electronically. I trained it with that along with its 121 00:08:59,520 --> 00:09:05,480 Speaker 3: it's aginal knowledge base, which keeps getting better all the time. 122 00:09:06,559 --> 00:09:08,640 Speaker 3: And I do this for business, you know, and my 123 00:09:09,920 --> 00:09:13,040 Speaker 3: job as the CEO of Electric Fusion Systems, I have 124 00:09:13,280 --> 00:09:18,920 Speaker 3: a fusion based GPT that's been trained and you could 125 00:09:18,920 --> 00:09:21,480 Speaker 3: do it for any business. Really, is that you end 126 00:09:21,600 --> 00:09:26,319 Speaker 3: up tuning your your AI assistance. 127 00:09:26,720 --> 00:09:28,120 Speaker 2: Can you trust the answers? 128 00:09:28,240 --> 00:09:36,680 Speaker 3: Ryan, Well, sometimes you say, oh this is wrong or 129 00:09:36,720 --> 00:09:40,000 Speaker 3: it's weak, And I did some editing on this, and 130 00:09:42,600 --> 00:09:47,880 Speaker 3: but for the most part they're fairly good. But you 131 00:09:47,920 --> 00:09:48,760 Speaker 3: do need to check it. 132 00:09:50,720 --> 00:09:52,760 Speaker 2: How do you know what to check? 133 00:09:54,160 --> 00:09:57,120 Speaker 3: Well, if there's something factual, or you try to go 134 00:09:57,160 --> 00:10:01,400 Speaker 3: to a more primary source. So if you were to, 135 00:10:01,800 --> 00:10:05,240 Speaker 3: you know, check what is the ET agenda. There's lots 136 00:10:05,280 --> 00:10:07,839 Speaker 3: of people that have written books on that. You know, 137 00:10:08,040 --> 00:10:11,120 Speaker 3: Rich Dolan wrote a book called The Alien Agenda, and 138 00:10:11,160 --> 00:10:15,400 Speaker 3: you can cross reference his concepts in his book with 139 00:10:15,679 --> 00:10:19,760 Speaker 3: what's written here. But since I scanned his whole book 140 00:10:19,840 --> 00:10:23,920 Speaker 3: and have it in my model, I felt confident that 141 00:10:23,960 --> 00:10:30,960 Speaker 3: it got that for the most part, things are checkable. 142 00:10:31,200 --> 00:10:33,400 Speaker 3: It takes more time and it takes more work. 143 00:10:33,880 --> 00:10:38,000 Speaker 2: Did it come up with any specific conclusions about the 144 00:10:38,040 --> 00:10:39,040 Speaker 2: et situation? 145 00:10:40,400 --> 00:10:45,360 Speaker 3: Yeah, that's probably the weakest point is that it gives 146 00:10:45,400 --> 00:10:51,520 Speaker 3: you a range of answers with the ET agenda. For example, 147 00:10:51,559 --> 00:10:56,760 Speaker 3: you know you have indifference and benevolence and malevolence and 148 00:10:57,000 --> 00:11:02,480 Speaker 3: scientific inquiry and you know they're they're anthropologists studying planet 149 00:11:02,520 --> 00:11:07,120 Speaker 3: Earth and emerging societies and other here for resources or 150 00:11:07,640 --> 00:11:12,000 Speaker 3: they're just trying to save their species, and you get 151 00:11:12,720 --> 00:11:16,760 Speaker 3: a lot of different answers. All of them may be 152 00:11:16,920 --> 00:11:22,440 Speaker 3: partially right, but you don't know and you can't tell 153 00:11:22,559 --> 00:11:23,040 Speaker 3: for sure. 154 00:11:24,520 --> 00:11:27,680 Speaker 2: So did it come up with a conclusion Ryan that 155 00:11:27,920 --> 00:11:32,400 Speaker 2: ets are visiting us and they're harmless anything like that. 156 00:11:33,679 --> 00:11:38,360 Speaker 3: No, nothing to say so definitively that they're harmless in 157 00:11:38,400 --> 00:11:42,079 Speaker 3: any way. There's a section on abductions. You know, why 158 00:11:42,120 --> 00:11:46,840 Speaker 3: do the abduct humans? What are they going for? Genetic information? 159 00:11:46,920 --> 00:11:51,520 Speaker 3: Are they going to learn more about emotional intelligence? There's 160 00:11:53,720 --> 00:11:57,080 Speaker 3: that's actually a good question, George is to ask it. 161 00:11:59,000 --> 00:12:05,560 Speaker 3: You know, do they mean us harm? And I think 162 00:12:05,679 --> 00:12:11,200 Speaker 3: some races may mean us no harm and other races 163 00:12:11,200 --> 00:12:16,120 Speaker 3: may mean us harm. But if they really wanted to 164 00:12:16,200 --> 00:12:19,160 Speaker 3: take over, they could have done that long ago. But 165 00:12:21,520 --> 00:12:25,079 Speaker 3: it's just it's all speculation. I found it but an 166 00:12:25,080 --> 00:12:32,680 Speaker 3: interesting exercise in sort of creating a blueprint of how 167 00:12:32,720 --> 00:12:37,959 Speaker 3: to do a better job of the government and transparency 168 00:12:38,600 --> 00:12:40,640 Speaker 3: and the pros and cons and telling the truth and 169 00:12:40,679 --> 00:12:46,120 Speaker 3: not telling the truth, and trying to lift everybody up 170 00:12:46,600 --> 00:12:47,880 Speaker 3: to a fairer world. 171 00:12:48,600 --> 00:12:51,080 Speaker 2: Could chat GPT lie to you? 172 00:12:53,640 --> 00:12:56,480 Speaker 3: I think it could if you've trained it to I mean, 173 00:12:56,520 --> 00:13:00,360 Speaker 3: some of the experts that are studying that feel have 174 00:13:00,559 --> 00:13:04,680 Speaker 3: have trained it to be an effective liar. Sure, but 175 00:13:04,880 --> 00:13:09,079 Speaker 3: from most things, you create a sort of a context 176 00:13:09,160 --> 00:13:14,440 Speaker 3: for the uh the AI. In my case, I said, 177 00:13:14,480 --> 00:13:20,920 Speaker 3: you know, act as if you're a scientific responder and 178 00:13:21,200 --> 00:13:24,960 Speaker 3: give me answers of a certain length, and you sort 179 00:13:24,960 --> 00:13:30,560 Speaker 3: of give it a context with which to interact with 180 00:13:30,679 --> 00:13:35,920 Speaker 3: you all personality, so to speak. If you suggest that 181 00:13:36,679 --> 00:13:40,920 Speaker 3: a negative personality or a lying personality, maybe you would 182 00:13:40,920 --> 00:13:44,720 Speaker 3: do that. But I don't know what guardrails open AI 183 00:13:45,440 --> 00:13:52,680 Speaker 3: has on that aspect, but I think it's possible. 184 00:13:52,840 --> 00:13:56,520 Speaker 1: Definitely, listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight 185 00:13:56,720 --> 00:13:59,199 Speaker 1: at one a m. Eastern and go to Coast to 186 00:13:59,240 --> 00:14:01,000 Speaker 1: Coast am dot com for more