1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:03,440 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on 2 00:00:03,600 --> 00:00:06,760 Speaker 1: iHeart Radio and welcome back to Coast to Coast George 3 00:00:06,800 --> 00:00:09,639 Speaker 1: nor with you with Constance Victoria Briggs. We're talking about 4 00:00:09,640 --> 00:00:13,600 Speaker 1: her latest work called The Encyclopedia of Moon Mysteries. And 5 00:00:13,840 --> 00:00:16,800 Speaker 1: let's finish up Constance about your INGOs Swan the remote 6 00:00:16,880 --> 00:00:19,799 Speaker 1: viewer story about some of the things he'sa he saw 7 00:00:19,920 --> 00:00:24,600 Speaker 1: like humanoids or humans or ets. What did he see there? Right? 8 00:00:24,720 --> 00:00:29,960 Speaker 1: So he called them moon dwellers. They were a humanoid. 9 00:00:30,480 --> 00:00:34,320 Speaker 1: He said that they could they could breathe on the moon. 10 00:00:35,320 --> 00:00:38,239 Speaker 1: He saw them working on the moon. They were digging. 11 00:00:40,240 --> 00:00:46,000 Speaker 1: He saw building structures, factories, roads. He saw workers there 12 00:00:46,520 --> 00:00:50,280 Speaker 1: that appeared to be robotic like, and he said that 13 00:00:50,320 --> 00:00:56,400 Speaker 1: they were putting together what seemed to be a laser mechanism. 14 00:00:56,440 --> 00:01:01,960 Speaker 1: But anyway, during the session, these extra stell saw him 15 00:01:02,160 --> 00:01:06,920 Speaker 1: somehow are they? They sensed his present after him, and 16 00:01:07,080 --> 00:01:10,920 Speaker 1: he was scared. He stopped the session and theoretically he 17 00:01:11,040 --> 00:01:14,679 Speaker 1: left the moon. Some of these beings followed him back 18 00:01:14,680 --> 00:01:21,840 Speaker 1: to Earth and he hid himself for weeks from them. So, yeah, 19 00:01:21,880 --> 00:01:26,760 Speaker 1: they knew he was there, that's amazing. But he saw 20 00:01:26,800 --> 00:01:30,880 Speaker 1: something and given the fact that he had first, like 21 00:01:30,920 --> 00:01:35,720 Speaker 1: I said, saw the rings of Jupiter, gives you some 22 00:01:35,800 --> 00:01:38,560 Speaker 1: credence as to, you know, whether or not he really 23 00:01:38,560 --> 00:01:40,800 Speaker 1: saw something up there. All right, kind of a far 24 00:01:40,880 --> 00:01:44,160 Speaker 1: out theory, but there are some who actually believe that 25 00:01:44,240 --> 00:01:48,760 Speaker 1: the moon is artificial and was towed into place. What 26 00:01:48,840 --> 00:01:53,320 Speaker 1: do you think of that? Yeah, So the spaceship moon theory. Honestly, 27 00:01:53,400 --> 00:01:58,320 Speaker 1: if I think my favorite moon theory, my favorite moon thing. 28 00:02:00,040 --> 00:02:04,400 Speaker 1: And interestingly enough it if the with all the with 29 00:02:04,520 --> 00:02:08,120 Speaker 1: all the mystery surrounding our moon and all of the 30 00:02:08,480 --> 00:02:11,120 Speaker 1: things that goes on with it that we cannot explain, 31 00:02:12,200 --> 00:02:15,880 Speaker 1: the spaceship moon theory is the one thing that kind 32 00:02:15,880 --> 00:02:21,359 Speaker 1: of makes sense and kind of ties it all together. Um, 33 00:02:21,400 --> 00:02:25,720 Speaker 1: I'll give you some background on it, Okay. So there 34 00:02:25,760 --> 00:02:31,600 Speaker 1: were two Russian scientists UH in the in the seventies, 35 00:02:31,720 --> 00:02:35,240 Speaker 1: nineteen seventy nine. They wrote an article that was published 36 00:02:35,320 --> 00:02:41,440 Speaker 1: in UH Sputnik magazine, a Sputnik journal, and they had 37 00:02:41,800 --> 00:02:48,120 Speaker 1: looked at the NASSA data from the Apollo missions um 38 00:02:48,200 --> 00:02:53,600 Speaker 1: and they they agreed that the moon was hollow, possibly 39 00:02:53,639 --> 00:02:58,799 Speaker 1: hollow because NASSA had um you know, indicated So when 40 00:02:58,800 --> 00:03:02,960 Speaker 1: they crashed the rover into into the moon, and we 41 00:03:03,000 --> 00:03:05,280 Speaker 1: all know the famous thing the moon rang like a bell. 42 00:03:05,520 --> 00:03:11,799 Speaker 1: That's right, they's hollow, all right, The tinging sound, yeah, 43 00:03:11,840 --> 00:03:14,880 Speaker 1: the the ringing sound. Yeah. Yeah. They looked at that. 44 00:03:15,440 --> 00:03:17,760 Speaker 1: They looked at the fact that you know, the moon 45 00:03:18,040 --> 00:03:20,840 Speaker 1: is only it seems to only be two and a 46 00:03:20,880 --> 00:03:24,640 Speaker 1: half mile thick when a meteor hits it, no matter 47 00:03:24,680 --> 00:03:29,359 Speaker 1: how heavy, you know, if it doesn't um in dent 48 00:03:30,040 --> 00:03:34,080 Speaker 1: any differently, no matter how how large it's a small 49 00:03:34,120 --> 00:03:40,720 Speaker 1: a meteorite, if you get the same measurement of the impact. Um. 50 00:03:40,760 --> 00:03:45,040 Speaker 1: They looked at the dust what it's made up, primarily 51 00:03:45,120 --> 00:03:52,240 Speaker 1: of chromium, chromium, titanium, zirconium, and they deduced that these 52 00:03:52,440 --> 00:03:56,600 Speaker 1: are very tough and strong elements. And if someone we're 53 00:03:56,680 --> 00:04:02,600 Speaker 1: going to create um an artificial shill ship or a 54 00:04:02,760 --> 00:04:06,480 Speaker 1: thing or satellite, that would be those would be the 55 00:04:06,520 --> 00:04:08,720 Speaker 1: elements that they would put on it because they can 56 00:04:08,760 --> 00:04:14,360 Speaker 1: resist the effects of temperature and radiationation and meteor bombardment, bombardment. 57 00:04:14,600 --> 00:04:17,200 Speaker 1: So anyway, they looked at all of these things and 58 00:04:17,240 --> 00:04:22,720 Speaker 1: they concluded that the moon is artificial and perhaps a 59 00:04:22,839 --> 00:04:26,520 Speaker 1: spaceship I'm going to reach it if you don't mind. 60 00:04:26,520 --> 00:04:28,400 Speaker 1: I'm going to read you a little quote that I 61 00:04:28,440 --> 00:04:33,440 Speaker 1: have from these guys. I really like the two Russians said, 62 00:04:33,640 --> 00:04:37,440 Speaker 1: it is more likely that what we have here is 63 00:04:37,440 --> 00:04:43,640 Speaker 1: a very ancient spaceship, the interior of which was filled 64 00:04:43,640 --> 00:04:49,679 Speaker 1: with fuel for the engines, materials and appliances for repair work, 65 00:04:50,160 --> 00:04:56,279 Speaker 1: navigation instruments, observation equipment, and all manner of machinery and 66 00:04:56,400 --> 00:05:01,599 Speaker 1: other words, everything necessary to able it to serve as 67 00:05:01,600 --> 00:05:05,799 Speaker 1: a Noah's Ark of intelligence, perhaps even as a home 68 00:05:06,200 --> 00:05:11,680 Speaker 1: of a whole civilization, envisaging being a prolonged, perhaps thousands 69 00:05:11,760 --> 00:05:18,320 Speaker 1: of millions of years existence and long wanderings through space. Wow. Yeah, 70 00:05:18,440 --> 00:05:22,839 Speaker 1: pretty big craft, though, what wouldn't it Well, yeah, I 71 00:05:22,880 --> 00:05:27,960 Speaker 1: mean I'm huge. Maybe you know, if it's going to 72 00:05:28,040 --> 00:05:32,640 Speaker 1: have some sort of civilization in there that's going on 73 00:05:32,720 --> 00:05:36,920 Speaker 1: for thousands of years, who knows. I mean, we can't 74 00:05:36,960 --> 00:05:41,080 Speaker 1: even begin to imagine what the thought with process that 75 00:05:41,120 --> 00:05:45,960 Speaker 1: would go into such a thing. But interestingly enough, this 76 00:05:46,160 --> 00:05:49,599 Speaker 1: is why I kind of think that our existence really 77 00:05:49,680 --> 00:05:53,560 Speaker 1: does tie into the whole ancient aliens theory, because when 78 00:05:53,600 --> 00:05:58,839 Speaker 1: you look at some of the old mythologies from the past, 79 00:05:59,520 --> 00:06:03,719 Speaker 1: you know, they tie the stuff together. For example, the 80 00:06:03,880 --> 00:06:08,120 Speaker 1: Zulu tribe of South Africa has an ancient tail that 81 00:06:08,200 --> 00:06:11,760 Speaker 1: they've handed down where they referred to the Moon as 82 00:06:11,800 --> 00:06:19,240 Speaker 1: an egg. This is because the Zulu people believed that 83 00:06:19,279 --> 00:06:22,680 Speaker 1: the Moon was hollowed out. So they have this legend 84 00:06:22,760 --> 00:06:26,719 Speaker 1: that says the Moon was brought into Earth's orbit ages 85 00:06:26,760 --> 00:06:32,120 Speaker 1: ago by two extraterrestrials. They had, according to the legend, 86 00:06:32,800 --> 00:06:37,000 Speaker 1: they had stolen the egg the Moon from what they 87 00:06:37,040 --> 00:06:41,000 Speaker 1: called a fire, a great fire dragon, and removed the yoke, 88 00:06:41,640 --> 00:06:45,880 Speaker 1: making it hollow, and they proceeded to move the egg 89 00:06:45,920 --> 00:06:49,960 Speaker 1: across the heavens to the Earth, causing great chaos throughout 90 00:06:49,960 --> 00:06:54,080 Speaker 1: the planet. This account, of course, is very similar to 91 00:06:54,279 --> 00:06:59,160 Speaker 1: what the Russians scientists were saying. How could the Zulu 92 00:06:59,279 --> 00:07:04,680 Speaker 1: people have known, you know, about the Moon possibly being 93 00:07:04,680 --> 00:07:08,360 Speaker 1: hollowed out and dragged across the universe. I mean, I've 94 00:07:08,360 --> 00:07:12,600 Speaker 1: heard dragged across the universe, sent across the universe, on 95 00:07:13,240 --> 00:07:15,800 Speaker 1: sent on the jail of a comet, engines in it. 96 00:07:15,880 --> 00:07:19,000 Speaker 1: But however you look at it, it was moved, you know, 97 00:07:19,080 --> 00:07:22,679 Speaker 1: into Earth's orbit from elsewhere. And here are these ancient people. 98 00:07:23,360 --> 00:07:28,520 Speaker 1: Somebody told them something. Yeah, it's like the Dogone tribe 99 00:07:28,600 --> 00:07:31,600 Speaker 1: who talked about the binary star system of the serious 100 00:07:31,640 --> 00:07:34,680 Speaker 1: star system. There's no way they would have known. They 101 00:07:34,680 --> 00:07:37,920 Speaker 1: didn't have telescopes. You can't see the second star with 102 00:07:37,960 --> 00:07:43,360 Speaker 1: your naked eye. Somebody told them something that's right. Well, yeah, 103 00:07:43,400 --> 00:07:47,480 Speaker 1: and they said, I mean the dog On said that 104 00:07:48,160 --> 00:07:52,400 Speaker 1: they had been vivoted by men from the star they 105 00:07:52,480 --> 00:07:56,280 Speaker 1: pointed up right when they were asked that question. Yeah, 106 00:07:56,360 --> 00:08:01,160 Speaker 1: so you know, the Zulus obviously had someone who gave 107 00:08:01,200 --> 00:08:04,680 Speaker 1: them information to very interesting stuff. I thought, you know, 108 00:08:04,920 --> 00:08:09,120 Speaker 1: and people aren't familiar with the story of this patient 109 00:08:09,280 --> 00:08:13,040 Speaker 1: moon as some are some are not, but I find 110 00:08:13,360 --> 00:08:15,840 Speaker 1: that maybe there's something to it. I mean, it really 111 00:08:16,360 --> 00:08:20,800 Speaker 1: doesn't act like any other moon in our solar system. 112 00:08:20,880 --> 00:08:24,760 Speaker 1: We know that, you know, it's it only faces in 113 00:08:24,760 --> 00:08:29,400 Speaker 1: one direction, and it's too really it's too big to 114 00:08:29,440 --> 00:08:33,160 Speaker 1: be a moon, a real moon, you know. It's just 115 00:08:33,240 --> 00:08:36,640 Speaker 1: it's really different. So it's almost like a mini planet, 116 00:08:36,840 --> 00:08:40,360 Speaker 1: isn't it. It's yeah, yeah, our hollow that's another thing 117 00:08:40,360 --> 00:08:46,400 Speaker 1: that they said. The scientists called it a hollowed out planetoid. Interesting. Now, 118 00:08:46,440 --> 00:08:51,120 Speaker 1: tell me, in terms of your opinion about the ancient 119 00:08:51,160 --> 00:08:54,400 Speaker 1: alien theory, what do you think happened on this planet 120 00:08:54,440 --> 00:09:01,480 Speaker 1: a long time ago. Wow. Um, I really think that 121 00:09:01,679 --> 00:09:08,600 Speaker 1: in the beginning of our history something happened that we 122 00:09:09,080 --> 00:09:13,800 Speaker 1: haven't pieced together exactly yet. But I think that the earth, 123 00:09:13,880 --> 00:09:19,080 Speaker 1: ancient people, the ancient aliens, researchers, you know, I think 124 00:09:19,120 --> 00:09:22,680 Speaker 1: that that we're getting there. But I think that in 125 00:09:22,720 --> 00:09:26,839 Speaker 1: the beginning of our civilization, I do believe that there 126 00:09:26,920 --> 00:09:33,000 Speaker 1: were advanced beings that came to the Earth with the 127 00:09:33,120 --> 00:09:37,160 Speaker 1: intention to help the planet. Could they have brought the 128 00:09:37,200 --> 00:09:40,560 Speaker 1: moon in here for that reason and placed it where 129 00:09:40,600 --> 00:09:43,760 Speaker 1: they did, because you know, without the moon, the Earth 130 00:09:43,840 --> 00:09:48,560 Speaker 1: would you know, chiltern, maybe rock and roll a little bit. 131 00:09:49,120 --> 00:09:50,800 Speaker 1: You know, they could have brought that in, but the 132 00:09:50,880 --> 00:09:55,320 Speaker 1: moon aside. It looks like if you listen to the 133 00:09:55,400 --> 00:10:00,719 Speaker 1: ancient tales, advanced beings came to the Earth, saw primitive 134 00:10:01,440 --> 00:10:06,720 Speaker 1: people and wanted to assist. I mean, I have the 135 00:10:06,720 --> 00:10:09,200 Speaker 1: the the stories of the angels that I've read about 136 00:10:09,559 --> 00:10:12,480 Speaker 1: from ancient times where they came and they in the 137 00:10:12,600 --> 00:10:15,760 Speaker 1: in the books of Enoch, it talks about how he 138 00:10:15,840 --> 00:10:20,360 Speaker 1: had seen angels and they were being taught you know, 139 00:10:20,400 --> 00:10:23,800 Speaker 1: the flora and the fauna, and how they brought this 140 00:10:23,960 --> 00:10:26,760 Speaker 1: information that they were taught, gave it to us how 141 00:10:26,760 --> 00:10:30,960 Speaker 1: to uh cleanliness, UM, how to guard and how to 142 00:10:31,080 --> 00:10:35,280 Speaker 1: farm all of the agriculture things. UM. I believe that 143 00:10:35,360 --> 00:10:38,320 Speaker 1: beings came in with the good intention of trying to 144 00:10:38,360 --> 00:10:44,400 Speaker 1: help UM primitive mankind along. UM. I believe that along 145 00:10:44,440 --> 00:10:47,880 Speaker 1: the way they sent envoys to the planet, UM, you know, 146 00:10:47,920 --> 00:10:50,840 Speaker 1: through the years to to help us, you know, Jesus 147 00:10:51,720 --> 00:10:56,040 Speaker 1: UM you know, UM in others and they were killed. 148 00:10:56,320 --> 00:11:01,120 Speaker 1: I believe that they tried since the beginning, you know, 149 00:11:01,360 --> 00:11:04,920 Speaker 1: to help us establish ourselves we you know, and and 150 00:11:04,960 --> 00:11:08,200 Speaker 1: they they removed themselves to a point I think we don't. 151 00:11:08,200 --> 00:11:11,160 Speaker 1: I think they're still around. We don't see them, um, 152 00:11:11,440 --> 00:11:13,480 Speaker 1: but I think that they're still around. But I do 153 00:11:13,640 --> 00:11:16,720 Speaker 1: think that we were helped in the beginning. Are you 154 00:11:16,800 --> 00:11:21,640 Speaker 1: familiar with the theory constance of the late Zecharia sitchen, Yes, 155 00:11:21,760 --> 00:11:24,920 Speaker 1: the Sumerians and the Anonarchy. Yeah that you know, they 156 00:11:24,920 --> 00:11:28,960 Speaker 1: came here. They needed workers, They needed to spread gold 157 00:11:29,080 --> 00:11:32,280 Speaker 1: particles and dust in their atmosphere to preserve it. And 158 00:11:32,320 --> 00:11:34,760 Speaker 1: they they didn't want to mind it themselves, so they 159 00:11:34,800 --> 00:11:37,079 Speaker 1: created mankind to do that. What do you think of that? 160 00:11:37,320 --> 00:11:41,680 Speaker 1: It's pretty far fetched, but it's interesting. It it's yeah, 161 00:11:41,760 --> 00:11:48,320 Speaker 1: it's interesting. And you know that is the Sumerian you know, 162 00:11:48,400 --> 00:11:54,720 Speaker 1: creation stories, and they they not only UM created, but 163 00:11:54,960 --> 00:11:57,880 Speaker 1: I believe that they he said that they tampered, you know, 164 00:11:57,960 --> 00:12:03,280 Speaker 1: with the DNA and UM, yeah, created a humankind to 165 00:12:03,440 --> 00:12:06,520 Speaker 1: be a slave race. And then the gods went to 166 00:12:06,640 --> 00:12:12,360 Speaker 1: war over the humans because some of the gods thought 167 00:12:12,440 --> 00:12:15,440 Speaker 1: that did the I should say, advanced beings from you know, 168 00:12:15,720 --> 00:12:19,719 Speaker 1: primitive man, they thought they were God. They went to 169 00:12:19,840 --> 00:12:23,000 Speaker 1: war because they thought that man should be free, they 170 00:12:23,000 --> 00:12:24,560 Speaker 1: should be free to make, that we should be free 171 00:12:24,600 --> 00:12:27,280 Speaker 1: to make, you know, our own choices, deliver our own 172 00:12:27,280 --> 00:12:29,360 Speaker 1: lives and the others we're saying though, so there was 173 00:12:29,800 --> 00:12:33,000 Speaker 1: a huge war over that. Do you think it's conceivable 174 00:12:33,120 --> 00:12:37,400 Speaker 1: that mankind may have gotten to the moon with high 175 00:12:37,400 --> 00:12:43,200 Speaker 1: technology thousands and thousands of years ago and that you 176 00:12:43,240 --> 00:12:47,640 Speaker 1: know it just for some reason it disappeared and we 177 00:12:47,720 --> 00:12:52,000 Speaker 1: lost knowledge of it. Well, you know, George, do they 178 00:12:52,040 --> 00:12:57,200 Speaker 1: have there is a theory that humankind has started over, 179 00:12:57,679 --> 00:13:01,520 Speaker 1: you know, the civilizations have started over more than once 180 00:13:01,960 --> 00:13:09,199 Speaker 1: due to a catastrophe on the planet. Um. No. Interestingly enough, 181 00:13:09,240 --> 00:13:11,000 Speaker 1: I mean, I have I have another love. I mean 182 00:13:11,040 --> 00:13:14,440 Speaker 1: the moon is one of my loves. Um Atlantis is 183 00:13:14,559 --> 00:13:17,680 Speaker 1: another one. And UM, so I'm going to just bring 184 00:13:17,679 --> 00:13:21,320 Speaker 1: Plato in here for a second. Um. Plato had said 185 00:13:21,480 --> 00:13:27,200 Speaker 1: that he received the story of Atlantis from from an 186 00:13:27,280 --> 00:13:31,080 Speaker 1: uncle who and he had a He had an ancestor 187 00:13:31,200 --> 00:13:35,559 Speaker 1: who had traveled thousands of years before Plato even shared 188 00:13:35,600 --> 00:13:39,360 Speaker 1: the story of Atlantis. He said, his ancestor had traveled 189 00:13:39,400 --> 00:13:44,079 Speaker 1: to Egypt, he learned and gain knowledge, and the Egyptian 190 00:13:44,200 --> 00:13:49,040 Speaker 1: priest told this man, you think you know everything, you 191 00:13:49,040 --> 00:13:52,360 Speaker 1: you know you you at the Athenians think you know 192 00:13:52,520 --> 00:13:55,880 Speaker 1: everything about your history. You don't. They said, there had 193 00:13:55,920 --> 00:14:02,600 Speaker 1: been several disasters and human kind had come to the 194 00:14:02,640 --> 00:14:06,960 Speaker 1: brink of destruction, and where they were in a lot 195 00:14:07,000 --> 00:14:09,400 Speaker 1: of their knowledge and their libraries of the time had 196 00:14:09,440 --> 00:14:13,520 Speaker 1: been washed away or destroyed. But where they were positioned, 197 00:14:13,960 --> 00:14:22,400 Speaker 1: they still had a library of information. And basically they 198 00:14:22,480 --> 00:14:26,040 Speaker 1: you know, that was my point. Basically, they said, he 199 00:14:26,080 --> 00:14:29,720 Speaker 1: went on to tell this man about Atlantis, this great 200 00:14:29,800 --> 00:14:32,080 Speaker 1: kingdom that had lived. But my point in telling the 201 00:14:32,200 --> 00:14:36,600 Speaker 1: story is that way back then, many thousands of years ago, 202 00:14:37,200 --> 00:14:40,840 Speaker 1: they were saying that human kind had to start over 203 00:14:41,640 --> 00:14:45,400 Speaker 1: more than one time. So how do we know how 204 00:14:45,440 --> 00:14:51,920 Speaker 1: advanced those people became before there was a destruction. Who 205 00:14:51,960 --> 00:14:56,160 Speaker 1: knows how how far advanced in you know, technology they 206 00:14:56,160 --> 00:15:00,000 Speaker 1: were able to come to go. There is a tale 207 00:15:01,160 --> 00:15:05,920 Speaker 1: where that said that Atlantis if you know whether or 208 00:15:05,920 --> 00:15:08,160 Speaker 1: not existed, you know, I mean there are there are 209 00:15:08,200 --> 00:15:13,480 Speaker 1: ancient uh tales in India that talks about humanity having 210 00:15:13,520 --> 00:15:17,320 Speaker 1: flying vehicles. Well, supposedly the Atlanteans could fly and they 211 00:15:17,320 --> 00:15:21,040 Speaker 1: could go to the Moon. Who's to say that we 212 00:15:21,440 --> 00:15:25,640 Speaker 1: didn't have that technology thousands and thousands of years ago 213 00:15:25,960 --> 00:15:28,480 Speaker 1: before we had to start over several times and we're 214 00:15:28,520 --> 00:15:31,600 Speaker 1: able to make it to the moon. That's exactly right, 215 00:15:31,800 --> 00:15:35,880 Speaker 1: That's exactly right. And that's a distinct possibility, isn't it. 216 00:15:37,200 --> 00:15:40,120 Speaker 1: I think it is. And if if you said, we 217 00:15:40,200 --> 00:15:43,080 Speaker 1: don't remember, we wouldn't know. We wouldn't remember. But you know, 218 00:15:43,360 --> 00:15:48,640 Speaker 1: they are uncovering a lot of artifacts on Earth that 219 00:15:48,720 --> 00:15:52,920 Speaker 1: they can't explain, some you know, mechanical devices that they 220 00:15:52,960 --> 00:15:57,600 Speaker 1: can't understand how way back when they could have had it. Well, 221 00:15:57,600 --> 00:16:00,400 Speaker 1: you know, that's a good question. Um, I think they've 222 00:16:00,440 --> 00:16:04,080 Speaker 1: uncovered something that looked like a cell phone. It wasn't 223 00:16:04,080 --> 00:16:06,680 Speaker 1: a cell phone, but you know, resembled it. They you know, 224 00:16:06,720 --> 00:16:09,680 Speaker 1: it had some sort of weird ability if I don't know. Um, 225 00:16:09,720 --> 00:16:14,880 Speaker 1: they've uncovered something that looked like a modern day watch. Um, okay, 226 00:16:15,560 --> 00:16:18,960 Speaker 1: little things that they've you know, they're they're finding. I 227 00:16:19,000 --> 00:16:21,840 Speaker 1: think eventually we'll get the answers. May. I don't know 228 00:16:21,840 --> 00:16:24,320 Speaker 1: if it'll be in our lifetime, but you know, I 229 00:16:24,360 --> 00:16:27,200 Speaker 1: think it'll come together. Listen to more Coast to Coast 230 00:16:27,240 --> 00:16:30,920 Speaker 1: AM every weeknight at one am Eastern, and go to 231 00:16:31,000 --> 00:16:33,080 Speaker 1: Coast to Coast am dot com for more