1 00:00:00,040 --> 00:00:02,160 Speaker 1: One of the highlights every month on Coast to Coast 2 00:00:02,240 --> 00:00:05,520 Speaker 1: is when Earth Files investigative reporter Linda Bolton how joins 3 00:00:05,600 --> 00:00:08,680 Speaker 1: us to share her reports and high strangeness happening all 4 00:00:08,720 --> 00:00:12,799 Speaker 1: over the planet. Linda explores cases of remarkable Earth changes, 5 00:00:12,880 --> 00:00:17,320 Speaker 1: baffling scientific mysteries, and incredible stories from witnesses who are 6 00:00:17,360 --> 00:00:21,480 Speaker 1: revealing their paranormal experiences for the very first time. Become 7 00:00:21,480 --> 00:00:24,520 Speaker 1: a Coast Insider and you can hear Linda's monthly earth 8 00:00:24,560 --> 00:00:27,160 Speaker 1: File reports and dig into the Coast to Coast archive 9 00:00:27,560 --> 00:00:30,560 Speaker 1: to check out her many previous appearances on the program. 10 00:00:30,840 --> 00:00:32,560 Speaker 1: So head on over to Coast to Coast a m 11 00:00:32,640 --> 00:00:35,760 Speaker 1: dot com and sign up today. Now here's a highlight 12 00:00:35,920 --> 00:00:39,840 Speaker 1: from Coast to Coast AM on iHeart Radio. Okay, welcome 13 00:00:39,840 --> 00:00:42,040 Speaker 1: back to Coast to Coast. George nrri with you. Scott 14 00:00:42,080 --> 00:00:45,080 Speaker 1: Stevens with us for the next couple hours. Fascinated with 15 00:00:45,120 --> 00:00:49,080 Speaker 1: weather since he was just a little guy keeping weather 16 00:00:49,200 --> 00:00:52,519 Speaker 1: diaries for his scouting merit badge. A year later, he 17 00:00:52,640 --> 00:00:55,880 Speaker 1: was reporting conditions in his small town in Idaho to 18 00:00:56,040 --> 00:00:59,920 Speaker 1: area television stations and went on to of course, get 19 00:01:00,000 --> 00:01:02,400 Speaker 1: into the weather business. And here he is back on 20 00:01:02,480 --> 00:01:05,399 Speaker 1: coast to coast, Scott, always a pleasure. I'm glad to 21 00:01:05,440 --> 00:01:08,039 Speaker 1: be here, George, glad to be here. Just reported on 22 00:01:08,080 --> 00:01:12,000 Speaker 1: that horrible situation in the southeast where tornado's wind us 23 00:01:12,000 --> 00:01:15,520 Speaker 1: five people dead already at what a year or it's 24 00:01:15,560 --> 00:01:18,399 Speaker 1: too early for this, Scott, I don't know, George. You know, 25 00:01:18,640 --> 00:01:21,320 Speaker 1: it's is the season, it says when the storm chasers get, 26 00:01:21,360 --> 00:01:24,040 Speaker 1: you know, their hearts pumping and their gears out there 27 00:01:24,040 --> 00:01:27,120 Speaker 1: and they chased down these storms. It's it's Mark. No, 28 00:01:27,400 --> 00:01:32,040 Speaker 1: it's April. It's April. Are moving along very fast. Well, 29 00:01:32,080 --> 00:01:35,760 Speaker 1: it's this normal weather or is this manipulated weather? Scott? 30 00:01:37,760 --> 00:01:42,160 Speaker 1: Manipulated weather? Is now the normal weather? I'm gonna I'm 31 00:01:42,160 --> 00:01:44,399 Speaker 1: gonna settle in on that where there's the hand of 32 00:01:44,440 --> 00:01:48,240 Speaker 1: this technology that has its play in just about every 33 00:01:48,280 --> 00:01:52,200 Speaker 1: event globally. You know, even here in southern Colorado today, 34 00:01:52,240 --> 00:01:55,360 Speaker 1: where we should have had snows early on the end 35 00:01:55,400 --> 00:01:58,440 Speaker 1: of the day, there's there's been a suppression. So we 36 00:01:58,440 --> 00:02:01,920 Speaker 1: we've missed out on probably be a third or a 37 00:02:01,960 --> 00:02:05,320 Speaker 1: half of what this event could have put down, and 38 00:02:05,440 --> 00:02:08,600 Speaker 1: certainly what I would have forecast, you know twenty years ago. 39 00:02:08,680 --> 00:02:11,120 Speaker 1: You know, being on the air, and you know, watching 40 00:02:11,160 --> 00:02:14,720 Speaker 1: these things come in. You know, I'm far far more 41 00:02:14,760 --> 00:02:20,320 Speaker 1: conservative in forecasting precipitation when a region has been in drought. 42 00:02:21,040 --> 00:02:23,960 Speaker 1: So in that regard, you know, the trend dryness in 43 00:02:24,000 --> 00:02:26,760 Speaker 1: the West, you know, is your friend. When when I 44 00:02:26,800 --> 00:02:29,600 Speaker 1: go to events, Scott, one of the big questions that 45 00:02:29,680 --> 00:02:33,920 Speaker 1: seems to always come up from people weather modification. Do 46 00:02:34,000 --> 00:02:36,280 Speaker 1: you believe it? George? What are kim trails? What are 47 00:02:36,320 --> 00:02:39,760 Speaker 1: they trying to do to us? People have fascinated with this, Scott. 48 00:02:40,760 --> 00:02:45,600 Speaker 1: It's a massive, massive topic and you know, one that 49 00:02:45,800 --> 00:02:49,960 Speaker 1: fascinated me all the way back when I saw some 50 00:02:50,040 --> 00:02:53,000 Speaker 1: of Clifford Carna Coom's early work, you know some of 51 00:02:53,400 --> 00:02:55,680 Speaker 1: you know, a picture of it. You know that what 52 00:02:55,800 --> 00:02:58,720 Speaker 1: was a DC nine derivative type of plane with this 53 00:02:58,919 --> 00:03:02,520 Speaker 1: massive full wing span contrail. I'm like that it is 54 00:03:02,560 --> 00:03:05,920 Speaker 1: a little odd that. Honestly, I just couldn't wrap my 55 00:03:06,080 --> 00:03:09,520 Speaker 1: head around the concept of why would they want to 56 00:03:09,560 --> 00:03:13,200 Speaker 1: do this? And so I held the whole topic at 57 00:03:13,320 --> 00:03:16,240 Speaker 1: Arms Lake for a couple of years, and then I 58 00:03:16,280 --> 00:03:19,800 Speaker 1: got into free energy and Tom Bearden, and then more 59 00:03:20,000 --> 00:03:23,239 Speaker 1: little data bits came together, and you know, by two 60 00:03:23,240 --> 00:03:26,119 Speaker 1: thousand and four, I was a firm believer that what 61 00:03:26,200 --> 00:03:28,320 Speaker 1: I was doing as a weather man on the air 62 00:03:28,919 --> 00:03:33,840 Speaker 1: was almost futile, almost futile. We had the technology, we 63 00:03:33,880 --> 00:03:36,520 Speaker 1: had the models, we had the expertise and understanding of 64 00:03:36,600 --> 00:03:41,000 Speaker 1: the weather and climate processes, and yet so many forecasts 65 00:03:41,160 --> 00:03:46,440 Speaker 1: who went horribly wrong and why why? And it ended 66 00:03:46,520 --> 00:03:49,880 Speaker 1: up being this manipulation of the weather that is storm 67 00:03:49,920 --> 00:03:52,760 Speaker 1: by storm, you know, square mile by square a mile. 68 00:03:52,960 --> 00:03:56,000 Speaker 1: They know what's going on. And you've had so many 69 00:03:56,040 --> 00:04:02,080 Speaker 1: shows with military guys and talking about technologies that aren't 70 00:04:02,160 --> 00:04:07,280 Speaker 1: from this era. They are so far advanced of their 71 00:04:07,360 --> 00:04:11,560 Speaker 1: understanding of not just this dimension, but other dimensions and 72 00:04:11,600 --> 00:04:16,440 Speaker 1: other technologies and computing power that puts you know, Intael 73 00:04:16,480 --> 00:04:20,320 Speaker 1: and Apple in these computers literally to shame. So they 74 00:04:20,320 --> 00:04:25,760 Speaker 1: can have full situational awareness of what's happening on this planet, 75 00:04:26,200 --> 00:04:28,960 Speaker 1: whether it's weather, whether it's in the oceans, you know, 76 00:04:29,360 --> 00:04:33,760 Speaker 1: or just massive amounts of information that is being swept 77 00:04:33,839 --> 00:04:38,640 Speaker 1: up by you know, the intelligence agencies. So I got there, 78 00:04:38,760 --> 00:04:42,680 Speaker 1: what weather is absolutely controlled. So let's let's assume that 79 00:04:42,760 --> 00:04:45,080 Speaker 1: they are controlling the weather. What are they doing it for? 80 00:04:45,160 --> 00:04:47,640 Speaker 1: Are they doing it to give us better weather? They're 81 00:04:47,640 --> 00:04:50,760 Speaker 1: doing it to create droughts. What are they trying to do? 82 00:04:51,440 --> 00:04:55,680 Speaker 1: I think ultimately it comes down to your two money. 83 00:04:55,960 --> 00:04:58,279 Speaker 1: You know, if you can you can make money in 84 00:04:58,440 --> 00:05:02,359 Speaker 1: orange juice futures or or in or in in moving 85 00:05:02,680 --> 00:05:05,840 Speaker 1: natural gas because you've got you know, weeks ahead of time. 86 00:05:05,880 --> 00:05:08,400 Speaker 1: There's an art of glast coming or simply as a 87 00:05:08,480 --> 00:05:12,240 Speaker 1: form as Bill Clinton's Defense secretary called it, ego terrorism, 88 00:05:12,760 --> 00:05:15,680 Speaker 1: something as as base and I don't like to do 89 00:05:15,839 --> 00:05:19,080 Speaker 1: the word evil, but something is as disruptive as that. 90 00:05:20,000 --> 00:05:24,279 Speaker 1: And if you've got a technology that menaces a civilization, 91 00:05:24,680 --> 00:05:29,280 Speaker 1: and I'm looking talking about humanity as a whole, menacing 92 00:05:29,279 --> 00:05:33,320 Speaker 1: the civilization by oscillating us. So we're going through, like 93 00:05:33,600 --> 00:05:38,320 Speaker 1: California years of drought, crippling drought, when we could talk 94 00:05:38,360 --> 00:05:41,839 Speaker 1: about agriculture and sustainability, you know, in the health of 95 00:05:41,839 --> 00:05:45,520 Speaker 1: the creeks, the rivers and streams, the poor forests, and 96 00:05:45,800 --> 00:05:49,080 Speaker 1: and how many hundreds of millions of trees have died 97 00:05:49,120 --> 00:05:52,159 Speaker 1: across the West in the last thirty to forty years. 98 00:05:52,240 --> 00:05:57,160 Speaker 1: Literally hundreds of millions of trees are dead. Colorado forests 99 00:05:57,720 --> 00:06:02,159 Speaker 1: decimated by this in jineering. And so then you take 100 00:06:02,200 --> 00:06:05,599 Speaker 1: a California to dry and then all of a sudden 101 00:06:05,640 --> 00:06:09,400 Speaker 1: this winter you've got these dams, Warville Dam for example, 102 00:06:09,480 --> 00:06:12,320 Speaker 1: you know, being breached because there's so much water coming. 103 00:06:13,760 --> 00:06:15,920 Speaker 1: And so here we are already in the first week 104 00:06:15,960 --> 00:06:19,919 Speaker 1: of April, which is typically the peak snow pack. You know, 105 00:06:20,080 --> 00:06:23,479 Speaker 1: April one is the benchmark that for years, you know, 106 00:06:23,520 --> 00:06:26,360 Speaker 1: the water managers go to the mountains. That April one 107 00:06:26,480 --> 00:06:31,000 Speaker 1: mark is the high snow mark, and from that budgets. 108 00:06:31,120 --> 00:06:34,880 Speaker 1: Water budgets are determined all across the West, whether it's 109 00:06:34,880 --> 00:06:38,680 Speaker 1: for hydroelectric power which keeps our air conditioners going, which 110 00:06:38,760 --> 00:06:41,440 Speaker 1: keeps the hay, the alfalfa growing in the fields, and 111 00:06:41,480 --> 00:06:43,880 Speaker 1: the corn and the potatoes and the beats and the orchards, 112 00:06:43,920 --> 00:06:46,599 Speaker 1: all of those things depend on that high snow mark 113 00:06:46,680 --> 00:06:51,279 Speaker 1: on April one. And this year we reach that mark 114 00:06:51,480 --> 00:06:55,560 Speaker 1: in February, and the snows came and they're still coming. 115 00:06:56,080 --> 00:06:59,120 Speaker 1: And even now as I look out two weeks California 116 00:06:59,200 --> 00:07:02,839 Speaker 1: is not done with the rain. Is good though, I 117 00:07:02,839 --> 00:07:06,279 Speaker 1: mean they were screaming they had a drought. Yeah, And 118 00:07:06,279 --> 00:07:08,360 Speaker 1: and there are two ways to look at this, George. 119 00:07:08,640 --> 00:07:11,800 Speaker 1: Number One, the snow comes out of the mountains gently 120 00:07:12,560 --> 00:07:15,760 Speaker 1: and that that April remains cool issue or at least 121 00:07:15,760 --> 00:07:19,360 Speaker 1: with normal slightly below normal temperatures, so the water doesn't 122 00:07:19,400 --> 00:07:24,360 Speaker 1: come down too fast. The deep water aquifers take sometimes months, 123 00:07:24,360 --> 00:07:28,600 Speaker 1: but usually years and occasionally decades to recharge, so it 124 00:07:28,640 --> 00:07:31,080 Speaker 1: wouldn't matter how much water was up there this year. 125 00:07:31,600 --> 00:07:33,840 Speaker 1: Only so much is going to get and going to 126 00:07:33,880 --> 00:07:36,720 Speaker 1: get in going to be able to recharge those deep 127 00:07:36,760 --> 00:07:42,040 Speaker 1: water aquifers. The more superficial ones will be in glorious 128 00:07:42,040 --> 00:07:45,440 Speaker 1: shape as we moved through the next year. So it 129 00:07:45,520 --> 00:07:48,880 Speaker 1: really depends on the spring melt. But I see the 130 00:07:48,960 --> 00:07:53,320 Speaker 1: cool weather persisting for at least the next fourteen days, 131 00:07:53,400 --> 00:07:56,240 Speaker 1: and so the slower the snow comes out of these mountains, 132 00:07:56,600 --> 00:07:59,360 Speaker 1: the better off the west will be. I think you're right. 133 00:07:59,600 --> 00:08:02,440 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast a m every weeknight 134 00:08:02,680 --> 00:08:05,160 Speaker 1: at one a m. Eastern and go to Coast to 135 00:08:05,160 --> 00:08:06,920 Speaker 1: Coast am dot com for more