1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:05,600 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:05,080 --> 00:00:07,800 Speaker 2: Man, welcome back to Coast to Coast George Nori with you. 3 00:00:07,960 --> 00:00:10,760 Speaker 2: Let me tell you about researcher Mike Ricksecker is the 4 00:00:11,080 --> 00:00:14,680 Speaker 2: author of Travels Through Time, A Walk in the Shadows, 5 00:00:15,160 --> 00:00:20,239 Speaker 2: Alaska's Mysterious Triangle, as well as several historic paranormal books. 6 00:00:20,239 --> 00:00:22,759 Speaker 2: He's the producer and director of a docu series, The 7 00:00:22,840 --> 00:00:26,960 Speaker 2: Shadow Dimension, and he produces additional full length content on 8 00:00:27,160 --> 00:00:32,519 Speaker 2: ancient Wisdom, lost civilizations, UFOs, and the supernatural on his 9 00:00:32,640 --> 00:00:36,479 Speaker 2: extensive YouTube channel. For more than six years, Mike has 10 00:00:36,520 --> 00:00:40,040 Speaker 2: hosted the Edge of the rabbit Hole livestream show. He 11 00:00:40,080 --> 00:00:44,080 Speaker 2: also hosts the Connecting the Universe interactive class, operates his 12 00:00:44,120 --> 00:00:48,120 Speaker 2: own book publishing and video production company, Haunted Road Media, 13 00:00:48,280 --> 00:00:51,840 Speaker 2: and also hosts the annual Stargates of Ancient Egypt Tour. 14 00:00:52,280 --> 00:00:55,920 Speaker 2: Mike Ricksecker is great, Senior Michael at the Conscious Life Expo. 15 00:00:56,760 --> 00:00:58,520 Speaker 3: He's great seeing you two, George. 16 00:00:58,520 --> 00:01:00,600 Speaker 2: Thanks for having me back on Coast to They had 17 00:01:00,600 --> 00:01:01,760 Speaker 2: a great crowd, didn't they. 18 00:01:02,400 --> 00:01:06,120 Speaker 3: Yeah, I really did. It was a fantastic turnout. Everybody 19 00:01:06,520 --> 00:01:08,960 Speaker 3: was really excited to be there and It was my 20 00:01:08,959 --> 00:01:12,360 Speaker 3: first time at Conscious Life Expo and I thoroughly enjoyed myself. 21 00:01:12,400 --> 00:01:15,480 Speaker 2: And you got a great award too, thank you. 22 00:01:15,600 --> 00:01:18,800 Speaker 3: Yes, I want a book award there and I was 23 00:01:18,840 --> 00:01:21,760 Speaker 3: fantastic to shake your hand directly after receiving that, so 24 00:01:21,840 --> 00:01:22,240 Speaker 3: thank you. 25 00:01:22,480 --> 00:01:24,760 Speaker 2: Well, you've done a great job over the years. How 26 00:01:24,800 --> 00:01:26,560 Speaker 2: did you get involved doing what you do? 27 00:01:27,920 --> 00:01:30,240 Speaker 3: You know, it really dates all the way back to 28 00:01:30,600 --> 00:01:33,280 Speaker 3: when I was a child. I was an experiencer and 29 00:01:33,520 --> 00:01:38,479 Speaker 3: had several Yeah, these things happened to me when I 30 00:01:38,520 --> 00:01:40,200 Speaker 3: was little. It dates all the way back to a 31 00:01:40,240 --> 00:01:43,360 Speaker 3: shadow person incident when I was about eight years old. 32 00:01:44,319 --> 00:01:46,960 Speaker 3: Had a few more when I was a teenager, and 33 00:01:47,880 --> 00:01:50,919 Speaker 3: it was a subject that, you know, the paranormal, supernatural 34 00:01:51,000 --> 00:01:55,160 Speaker 3: that really intrigued me. Couple that with you know, I 35 00:01:55,200 --> 00:02:01,080 Speaker 3: have a fascination for ancient Egypt history and so forth, 36 00:02:01,280 --> 00:02:05,720 Speaker 3: and over the years discovered these two worlds really meshed together, 37 00:02:06,080 --> 00:02:08,240 Speaker 3: and it's just it's been a lifelong journey. 38 00:02:09,040 --> 00:02:10,840 Speaker 2: Well, you do a great job researching. 39 00:02:11,600 --> 00:02:11,960 Speaker 3: Thank you. 40 00:02:12,240 --> 00:02:15,799 Speaker 2: Have you come across anything that startled you in your work? 41 00:02:16,880 --> 00:02:22,040 Speaker 3: Oh, there are many things that have startled me. You know, 42 00:02:22,520 --> 00:02:24,840 Speaker 3: it just kind of depends on which area we're talking about, 43 00:02:24,880 --> 00:02:26,480 Speaker 3: you know, when it comes to okay, if we're going 44 00:02:26,520 --> 00:02:31,440 Speaker 3: to talk about paranormal and supernatural. One of the things 45 00:02:31,560 --> 00:02:34,840 Speaker 3: that really starred me the most was watching and there 46 00:02:34,880 --> 00:02:38,880 Speaker 3: are five of us that saw this, was watching the 47 00:02:38,960 --> 00:02:42,320 Speaker 3: shadow smoke from the end of a hallway and a 48 00:02:42,400 --> 00:02:45,639 Speaker 3: historic hotel in Alton, Illinois and the North Springs Hotel 49 00:02:45,880 --> 00:02:50,360 Speaker 3: that morphed into the apparition of a little girl. And 50 00:02:50,400 --> 00:02:53,000 Speaker 3: so that was one of those moments where it kind 51 00:02:53,000 --> 00:02:55,040 Speaker 3: of clicked that, you know, a lot of this phenomena 52 00:02:55,200 --> 00:03:00,720 Speaker 3: that we see and experience are really related. That particular 53 00:03:00,760 --> 00:03:06,960 Speaker 3: incident would have been shadow and what we call apparitions, 54 00:03:08,320 --> 00:03:11,480 Speaker 3: and then over the years discovering a lot of these 55 00:03:11,639 --> 00:03:15,440 Speaker 3: different time slip stories are also related as well to 56 00:03:15,600 --> 00:03:16,519 Speaker 3: this type of phenomena. 57 00:03:16,800 --> 00:03:19,320 Speaker 2: You wrote a book in twenty twenty three, now too 58 00:03:19,360 --> 00:03:22,520 Speaker 2: long ago, call Travels through Time. Tell us a little bit. 59 00:03:22,480 --> 00:03:24,919 Speaker 3: About that, Yeah, absolutely, and that's the one that won 60 00:03:24,960 --> 00:03:29,560 Speaker 3: the award there at Consciousness. Yeah. So this particular book 61 00:03:29,639 --> 00:03:32,639 Speaker 3: is the first of the Connecting the Universe series, a 62 00:03:32,639 --> 00:03:35,080 Speaker 3: whole new series of books that I am in the 63 00:03:35,120 --> 00:03:40,720 Speaker 3: process of writing, and this really dives into the nature 64 00:03:40,840 --> 00:03:43,920 Speaker 3: of time. The possibilities of real time travel, and it 65 00:03:44,040 --> 00:03:46,880 Speaker 3: gets into a theory that I call stack time theory, 66 00:03:47,280 --> 00:03:51,400 Speaker 3: and essentially it's this idea that you know, all time 67 00:03:51,680 --> 00:03:56,000 Speaker 3: is concurrent, past, present, future, are all here right now, 68 00:03:57,000 --> 00:04:02,200 Speaker 3: every moment within that unit verse having its own because 69 00:04:02,240 --> 00:04:08,720 Speaker 3: everything's energy frequency, residence, vibration, each of those moments has 70 00:04:08,800 --> 00:04:12,000 Speaker 3: its own frequency to it, and if we can tap 71 00:04:12,080 --> 00:04:15,080 Speaker 3: into those different frequencies, we can move up and down 72 00:04:15,120 --> 00:04:18,760 Speaker 3: that stack at will, which of course is a challenge 73 00:04:18,800 --> 00:04:21,080 Speaker 3: to be able to harness that particular frequency. But we 74 00:04:21,160 --> 00:04:27,000 Speaker 3: see these types of things play out in our everyday lives, 75 00:04:27,040 --> 00:04:29,960 Speaker 3: where two moments can bleed into each other, and that's 76 00:04:30,000 --> 00:04:32,240 Speaker 3: where we might that's where we have what we call 77 00:04:32,279 --> 00:04:36,080 Speaker 3: a time slip, which in some instances gets mistaken for 78 00:04:36,200 --> 00:04:38,960 Speaker 3: what we might call a haunting or seeing a ghost 79 00:04:39,040 --> 00:04:39,800 Speaker 3: or something like that. 80 00:04:40,680 --> 00:04:42,400 Speaker 2: Now, what is a stargate, Like. 81 00:04:43,279 --> 00:04:48,719 Speaker 3: Yeah, stargate, So stargates, we're talking about a doorway. Really, 82 00:04:49,200 --> 00:04:52,080 Speaker 3: you can call it a portal. Perhaps it's using some 83 00:04:52,120 --> 00:04:57,280 Speaker 3: sort of wormhole technology to enter into another place, well, 84 00:04:57,400 --> 00:05:03,200 Speaker 3: could be someplace else and the planet. Usually we regard 85 00:05:03,240 --> 00:05:06,080 Speaker 3: it as something that will take us to another place 86 00:05:06,200 --> 00:05:11,880 Speaker 3: in the cosmos. But it's pretty much what it describes 87 00:05:11,920 --> 00:05:15,719 Speaker 3: itself as is a gateway through the stars to some 88 00:05:15,960 --> 00:05:21,200 Speaker 3: other location. This could even be another dimension in space time. 89 00:05:22,360 --> 00:05:24,960 Speaker 2: Are you familiar with the work of David Politis. 90 00:05:25,400 --> 00:05:26,119 Speaker 3: I am. Yes. 91 00:05:27,839 --> 00:05:33,599 Speaker 2: He contends that people disappear in state parks and he said, 92 00:05:33,640 --> 00:05:38,680 Speaker 2: in some cases they're just walking along like a little kid. 93 00:05:39,320 --> 00:05:43,320 Speaker 2: Parents turn around and the kid's gone. Where'd they go? 94 00:05:43,960 --> 00:05:47,920 Speaker 2: Is it possible, Michael, that they're falling through these stargates. 95 00:05:49,360 --> 00:05:52,400 Speaker 3: It's completely possible. They may be passing through what we 96 00:05:52,520 --> 00:05:56,120 Speaker 3: might call a stargate or some sort of portal. You know, 97 00:05:56,279 --> 00:06:00,919 Speaker 3: there are some of these people that come back and 98 00:06:00,960 --> 00:06:04,680 Speaker 3: they have some of the most bizarre stories. And what 99 00:06:04,720 --> 00:06:08,440 Speaker 3: they'll say is, look, I was on the path and 100 00:06:08,720 --> 00:06:12,400 Speaker 3: I heard something off on the side out in the 101 00:06:12,400 --> 00:06:15,320 Speaker 3: woods there somewhere. They took a step or two off 102 00:06:15,400 --> 00:06:19,400 Speaker 3: the path and didn't find what was making the noise, 103 00:06:19,440 --> 00:06:21,520 Speaker 3: turned around to get back on the path, and all 104 00:06:21,520 --> 00:06:23,680 Speaker 3: of a sudden, the path is gone. And they only 105 00:06:23,680 --> 00:06:25,880 Speaker 3: took a step or two. Where did the path go? 106 00:06:26,640 --> 00:06:29,679 Speaker 3: So when they stepped off of that path, did they 107 00:06:30,440 --> 00:06:33,640 Speaker 3: step through a portal into Maybe it was another point 108 00:06:33,640 --> 00:06:37,000 Speaker 3: in time, Maybe it took them to somewhere else in 109 00:06:37,080 --> 00:06:39,640 Speaker 3: the forest, and then it might be days later that 110 00:06:39,680 --> 00:06:44,760 Speaker 3: they're finally wandering through the woods. So these are really strange, 111 00:06:44,880 --> 00:06:49,440 Speaker 3: bizarre stories, but it causes us to question our own 112 00:06:49,520 --> 00:06:50,760 Speaker 3: reality and this dimension. 113 00:06:52,000 --> 00:06:55,679 Speaker 2: Back in Gosh, I think it was nineteen thirty five, 114 00:06:55,800 --> 00:06:58,360 Speaker 2: Albert Einstein and a fellow by the name of Nathan 115 00:06:58,520 --> 00:07:02,600 Speaker 2: Rosen came up with a theory that they believe that 116 00:07:02,640 --> 00:07:05,359 Speaker 2: there were portals and tunnels in space. What do you 117 00:07:05,360 --> 00:07:05,920 Speaker 2: think of that? 118 00:07:07,080 --> 00:07:12,520 Speaker 3: Yeah, they were absolutely correct. So yeah, the Einstein rosenbridge, 119 00:07:12,960 --> 00:07:18,720 Speaker 3: what we call commonly call a wormhole. NASA a little 120 00:07:18,720 --> 00:07:22,840 Speaker 3: over ten years ago now discovered in space between us 121 00:07:23,480 --> 00:07:26,920 Speaker 3: and the Sun what they call X points. But they 122 00:07:26,920 --> 00:07:30,200 Speaker 3: have admitted these are actually portals, and they've since satellites 123 00:07:30,280 --> 00:07:33,600 Speaker 3: up to these to research and discover more about them. 124 00:07:34,200 --> 00:07:38,720 Speaker 3: And essentially, what these portals do, these X points is 125 00:07:38,920 --> 00:07:43,640 Speaker 3: they allow a greater influx of the solar wind from 126 00:07:43,680 --> 00:07:47,720 Speaker 3: the Sun to hit the Earth. Now, they will open 127 00:07:47,960 --> 00:07:52,200 Speaker 3: and close at random, they will open and close at 128 00:07:52,240 --> 00:07:55,720 Speaker 3: different sizes. In all of their research that they've done 129 00:07:55,720 --> 00:07:59,160 Speaker 3: on these so far, they really haven't found any particular 130 00:07:59,280 --> 00:08:03,040 Speaker 3: pattern to how these things operate, but they know they're there, 131 00:08:03,160 --> 00:08:05,080 Speaker 3: And I think it's pretty significant that you have an 132 00:08:05,120 --> 00:08:09,200 Speaker 3: organization like NASA that is admitting, yes, we do have 133 00:08:09,320 --> 00:08:10,560 Speaker 3: portals out there in space. 134 00:08:11,320 --> 00:08:15,520 Speaker 2: Do you think if there are extraterrestrials visiting here they 135 00:08:15,560 --> 00:08:17,640 Speaker 2: are traveling through wormholes? 136 00:08:18,760 --> 00:08:21,200 Speaker 3: It's certainly one method that they could be using to 137 00:08:21,200 --> 00:08:23,880 Speaker 3: get here. They may have figured out how to establish 138 00:08:24,360 --> 00:08:27,760 Speaker 3: that Einstein Rosen bridge, what we call a wormhole, to 139 00:08:27,760 --> 00:08:31,760 Speaker 3: be able to traverse from wherever they are in the 140 00:08:31,880 --> 00:08:37,080 Speaker 3: universe to here. It takes a long time to travel 141 00:08:37,120 --> 00:08:40,240 Speaker 3: the university humanity right now, even if we were to 142 00:08:41,240 --> 00:08:44,600 Speaker 3: put ourselves in some sort of ship to try to 143 00:08:44,640 --> 00:08:47,760 Speaker 3: do that. You think about the Voyager satellite they have 144 00:08:47,960 --> 00:08:53,480 Speaker 3: just in recent years here gone beyond our Solar system, 145 00:08:53,559 --> 00:08:56,400 Speaker 3: but it took them many decades to do that. So 146 00:08:57,200 --> 00:08:59,520 Speaker 3: you know, as human life forms, we don't have the 147 00:08:59,559 --> 00:09:02,000 Speaker 3: resource is or the lifespan to be able to do that, 148 00:09:02,559 --> 00:09:06,640 Speaker 3: and it's reasonable to think that with extraterrestrials they would 149 00:09:06,640 --> 00:09:10,800 Speaker 3: also have those same limitations. But we do have evidence 150 00:09:10,960 --> 00:09:14,240 Speaker 3: of extraterrestrial life forms coming here to Earth. So the 151 00:09:14,360 --> 00:09:18,679 Speaker 3: question then is how are they traveling those vast distances. 152 00:09:19,280 --> 00:09:22,559 Speaker 3: So the idea and the concept that they have been 153 00:09:22,600 --> 00:09:26,640 Speaker 3: able to figure out how to create their own Einstein 154 00:09:26,760 --> 00:09:29,960 Speaker 3: Rosen bridge or wormhole or stargate, it's certainly feasible. 155 00:09:30,400 --> 00:09:33,880 Speaker 2: Well with Mike Ricksecker, and we're talking about travels through time. 156 00:09:34,280 --> 00:09:37,160 Speaker 2: How do people see and hear you on YouTube? 157 00:09:37,280 --> 00:09:37,480 Speaker 1: Mike? 158 00:09:38,080 --> 00:09:41,800 Speaker 3: Oh yeah, I have my own YouTube channel there, Mike Ricksecker. 159 00:09:41,880 --> 00:09:44,440 Speaker 3: So you can just go YouTube dot com slash at 160 00:09:44,840 --> 00:09:48,520 Speaker 3: him Ricksecker and have over seven hundred videos out there. 161 00:09:48,679 --> 00:09:51,320 Speaker 3: Been on the platform wow for a while. Now that's 162 00:09:51,360 --> 00:09:56,120 Speaker 3: a lot, Yeah, very many years of work. So yeah, 163 00:09:56,360 --> 00:09:57,240 Speaker 3: it's quite a bit. 164 00:09:58,800 --> 00:10:01,440 Speaker 2: How accurate do you think Einstein and Rosen might have 165 00:10:01,520 --> 00:10:04,920 Speaker 2: been when they talk about these points in the universe 166 00:10:05,559 --> 00:10:06,760 Speaker 2: that would allow travel. 167 00:10:07,920 --> 00:10:11,400 Speaker 3: Well, you know, we still use a lot of Einstein's 168 00:10:11,480 --> 00:10:15,560 Speaker 3: theories to get us around the Solar system. 169 00:10:15,800 --> 00:10:17,679 Speaker 2: And the guy never had a computer. 170 00:10:17,960 --> 00:10:21,679 Speaker 3: No, he didn't. He had a team of mathematicians had 171 00:10:21,920 --> 00:10:25,400 Speaker 3: He even admitted that math was not his strong suit, 172 00:10:25,480 --> 00:10:28,400 Speaker 3: but the physics part of it certainly was, and so 173 00:10:28,600 --> 00:10:33,560 Speaker 3: he used a team of mathematicians to help him out 174 00:10:33,600 --> 00:10:35,760 Speaker 3: with some of the heavy lifting. But yeah, we still 175 00:10:35,880 --> 00:10:39,200 Speaker 3: use all of that today to get to Mars or 176 00:10:39,280 --> 00:10:44,960 Speaker 3: since satellite top of Pluto, his theories you still work. 177 00:10:45,720 --> 00:10:50,000 Speaker 2: He regretted eventually his theory of relativity because he thinks 178 00:10:50,040 --> 00:10:53,679 Speaker 2: he's one of those responsible for the atomic bomb and 179 00:10:53,720 --> 00:10:56,960 Speaker 2: he saw what it did and it bothered him. 180 00:10:58,800 --> 00:11:06,640 Speaker 3: Yeah, a lot of those people that worked on that project. Yeah, 181 00:11:06,679 --> 00:11:11,880 Speaker 3: that really bothered, like Oppenheimer and so forth. You know, Unfortunately, 182 00:11:12,440 --> 00:11:17,760 Speaker 3: humanity has a propensity to take their discoveries and weaponize it, 183 00:11:18,360 --> 00:11:19,720 Speaker 3: which is a real shame. 184 00:11:19,840 --> 00:11:20,160 Speaker 1: And so. 185 00:11:22,200 --> 00:11:26,679 Speaker 3: Yeah, I can completely understand how, you know, the thought 186 00:11:26,720 --> 00:11:30,880 Speaker 3: of that personally affected him, but it did help us 187 00:11:30,880 --> 00:11:35,680 Speaker 3: in so many other areas other than weaponry that it's 188 00:11:35,720 --> 00:11:37,439 Speaker 3: been a great benefit to humanity. 189 00:11:38,280 --> 00:11:44,080 Speaker 2: Cern which borders France and Switzerland. In that area, there 190 00:11:44,160 --> 00:11:48,640 Speaker 2: was concern that by using CERN that they would create 191 00:11:49,160 --> 00:11:53,280 Speaker 2: wormholes and black holes. What do you think of that controversy? 192 00:11:54,120 --> 00:11:57,040 Speaker 3: Yeah, you know, that's something that could certainly happen. We 193 00:11:57,200 --> 00:12:03,559 Speaker 3: have seen just recently here a wormhole that was created 194 00:12:03,559 --> 00:12:06,760 Speaker 3: in the lab NOTCERN, but and I off the top 195 00:12:06,800 --> 00:12:08,360 Speaker 3: of my hand, I can't remember the name of the lab, 196 00:12:09,880 --> 00:12:13,040 Speaker 3: but they had actually created on the quantum level, a 197 00:12:13,120 --> 00:12:19,160 Speaker 3: quantum environment two miniature black holes connected via wormhole and 198 00:12:19,160 --> 00:12:22,200 Speaker 3: they were able to send a message through one. So 199 00:12:22,840 --> 00:12:27,840 Speaker 3: it's something that our scientists are working on. It is 200 00:12:27,840 --> 00:12:31,480 Speaker 3: a little concerning because this was he talking okay. 201 00:12:31,360 --> 00:12:35,120 Speaker 2: To this they of Amsterdam, by the way. 202 00:12:34,960 --> 00:12:39,640 Speaker 3: Thank you, thank you. I appreciate that. Yeah, it would 203 00:12:39,679 --> 00:12:42,880 Speaker 3: be concerning if you made a created a black hole 204 00:12:42,920 --> 00:12:45,800 Speaker 3: that was too large in the lab, would it engulf 205 00:12:45,840 --> 00:12:48,240 Speaker 3: our planet? So I can certainly see why we would 206 00:12:48,240 --> 00:12:51,880 Speaker 3: be concerned about it. But it's you know, it's that 207 00:12:52,240 --> 00:12:56,080 Speaker 3: frontier of technology in which we are trying to try 208 00:12:56,120 --> 00:12:59,080 Speaker 3: to come up with those solutions to traverse the cosmos. 209 00:12:59,120 --> 00:13:02,079 Speaker 3: So it's going to be something that we attempt to do. 210 00:13:02,600 --> 00:13:07,080 Speaker 3: And really it may be a callback to technology that 211 00:13:07,200 --> 00:13:10,480 Speaker 3: the ancient pat you know we see throughout ancient Egypt 212 00:13:10,679 --> 00:13:15,760 Speaker 3: and other places in the world, these stargate locations. Is 213 00:13:16,520 --> 00:13:20,120 Speaker 3: this what they had originally created? Maybe they used a 214 00:13:20,120 --> 00:13:25,120 Speaker 3: different type of science to establish it, but it's one 215 00:13:25,160 --> 00:13:27,520 Speaker 3: of those where I think we're rediscovering our past here. 216 00:13:28,000 --> 00:13:30,400 Speaker 2: If you went into a stargate, or if you went 217 00:13:30,440 --> 00:13:32,920 Speaker 2: into a wormhole, could you get back? 218 00:13:34,320 --> 00:13:37,400 Speaker 3: Ah, that's a wonderful question. I would I would like 219 00:13:37,440 --> 00:13:40,360 Speaker 3: to think so I would hope that it's not a 220 00:13:40,400 --> 00:13:46,400 Speaker 3: one way trip quite nowhere, right, Yeah, the question becomes 221 00:13:46,440 --> 00:13:48,640 Speaker 3: what do we what do we see when we're on 222 00:13:48,679 --> 00:13:52,080 Speaker 3: the other side of the wormhole? Is it a direct path? 223 00:13:52,240 --> 00:13:55,200 Speaker 3: Is it through way you know, one to the other 224 00:13:55,600 --> 00:13:58,240 Speaker 3: you know? Or you know, do we have to reactivate it? 225 00:13:58,520 --> 00:14:02,199 Speaker 3: We've many people are famil you're with the science fiction 226 00:14:02,920 --> 00:14:05,800 Speaker 3: movie and television show Stargate, where once you got to 227 00:14:05,840 --> 00:14:10,240 Speaker 3: the other side, you had to reactivate it. That's an 228 00:14:10,240 --> 00:14:12,800 Speaker 3: answer that we don't quite have yet, but it's possible 229 00:14:12,840 --> 00:14:15,240 Speaker 3: that we would have to get to the other side 230 00:14:15,360 --> 00:14:16,920 Speaker 3: and of course turn it back on. 231 00:14:18,200 --> 00:14:21,200 Speaker 2: Are you fascinated by stargates? 232 00:14:21,720 --> 00:14:24,880 Speaker 3: You could certainly say that if we are running an 233 00:14:24,920 --> 00:14:28,840 Speaker 3: annual Stargates of Ancient Egypt tour, I think it's fascinating. 234 00:14:29,080 --> 00:14:33,000 Speaker 3: I think it's again technology that we once had in 235 00:14:33,000 --> 00:14:37,960 Speaker 3: our ancient past, and to establish something like that here 236 00:14:38,000 --> 00:14:40,960 Speaker 3: in our present, in our future, to be able to 237 00:14:41,000 --> 00:14:43,560 Speaker 3: move across the consoles. This may be how we discover 238 00:14:43,960 --> 00:14:50,880 Speaker 3: and travel to other worlds. Why Egypt, you know, it's 239 00:14:50,880 --> 00:14:55,280 Speaker 3: almost like a callback to home. I think many of 240 00:14:55,360 --> 00:15:00,000 Speaker 3: us and people that have talked to all these various conferences, 241 00:15:00,200 --> 00:15:05,720 Speaker 3: is people that have talked to in our circles. A 242 00:15:05,760 --> 00:15:09,000 Speaker 3: lot of people will say, you know, I feel like 243 00:15:09,120 --> 00:15:11,840 Speaker 3: I'd once lived the past life in Egypt, and the 244 00:15:11,880 --> 00:15:14,000 Speaker 3: same is true of me. I feel like I have 245 00:15:14,280 --> 00:15:19,520 Speaker 3: and there's a mystique about it. It's one of our 246 00:15:19,520 --> 00:15:25,680 Speaker 3: most ancient civilizations. I believe that there's ancient Atlantean technology 247 00:15:25,720 --> 00:15:29,360 Speaker 3: there that is yet to be discovered, and so this 248 00:15:29,520 --> 00:15:32,480 Speaker 3: is one of the biggest mysteries of the world that 249 00:15:32,600 --> 00:15:34,720 Speaker 3: we're still trying to find information about. 250 00:15:36,480 --> 00:15:38,960 Speaker 2: Do you think science will truly get to the point 251 00:15:39,040 --> 00:15:42,000 Speaker 2: where we can travel through these stargates. 252 00:15:42,840 --> 00:15:46,280 Speaker 3: I believe we'll eventually figure it out. Again, they're working 253 00:15:46,320 --> 00:15:50,200 Speaker 3: on it now. It might be a different technology that 254 00:15:50,320 --> 00:15:57,600 Speaker 3: is eventually used. But what's interesting about our species is 255 00:15:57,680 --> 00:16:02,479 Speaker 3: that we come up with these ideas in our stories, 256 00:16:02,600 --> 00:16:07,720 Speaker 3: in our science fiction. Our imagination is a wonderful thing. 257 00:16:08,200 --> 00:16:11,240 Speaker 3: In while for decades we'll consider that well, you know, 258 00:16:11,280 --> 00:16:15,640 Speaker 3: that's just storytelling and that's just science fiction, we eventually 259 00:16:15,640 --> 00:16:18,800 Speaker 3: make it happen. We've seen so much technology come out 260 00:16:18,800 --> 00:16:23,720 Speaker 3: of you know, television shows like Star Trek that we 261 00:16:23,880 --> 00:16:27,400 Speaker 3: have now today that forty to fifty years ago was 262 00:16:27,440 --> 00:16:31,280 Speaker 3: just considered science fiction. So we eventually make these things happen. 263 00:16:31,760 --> 00:16:34,920 Speaker 3: The path there might not be obvious, and it might 264 00:16:34,920 --> 00:16:37,280 Speaker 3: take us a long time, but we seem to eventually 265 00:16:37,800 --> 00:16:40,920 Speaker 3: make our imagination happen. We manifest these things. 266 00:16:41,560 --> 00:16:43,600 Speaker 2: If we put you in a time machine and send 267 00:16:43,680 --> 00:16:46,400 Speaker 2: you back to talk to Albert Einstein, what would you 268 00:16:46,440 --> 00:16:46,960 Speaker 2: ask him? 269 00:16:51,000 --> 00:16:53,160 Speaker 3: That's a good question, you know. I would probably just 270 00:16:53,400 --> 00:16:56,080 Speaker 3: really sit down and have a chat with him. Maybe 271 00:16:56,080 --> 00:16:57,880 Speaker 3: i'd ask them what his favorite type of coffee is, 272 00:16:59,320 --> 00:17:03,920 Speaker 3: But honestly, though, I would I would ask him about 273 00:17:03,960 --> 00:17:11,480 Speaker 3: how he felt about the burgeoning technology that we have 274 00:17:11,800 --> 00:17:17,560 Speaker 3: and how he saw his works benefit humanity. 275 00:17:20,840 --> 00:17:25,880 Speaker 2: Yeah, that's very possible. What about Steven Hackey, I'd. 276 00:17:25,720 --> 00:17:29,840 Speaker 3: Pick his brain about black holes? That was really his 277 00:17:30,000 --> 00:17:34,679 Speaker 3: forte was his you know, And that's another one where 278 00:17:35,640 --> 00:17:39,520 Speaker 3: it used to be that we didn't really believe black 279 00:17:39,520 --> 00:17:43,119 Speaker 3: holes existed, and now we pretty much all do. But 280 00:17:43,200 --> 00:17:45,040 Speaker 3: he was at the forefront of that. So I would 281 00:17:45,040 --> 00:17:49,000 Speaker 3: certainly pick his brain about what he knew and what 282 00:17:49,119 --> 00:17:50,679 Speaker 3: he was theorizing about black holes. 283 00:17:51,080 --> 00:17:54,360 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 284 00:17:54,400 --> 00:17:57,320 Speaker 1: one a m Eastern and go to Coast to coastam 285 00:17:57,359 --> 00:17:58,480 Speaker 1: dot com for more