1 00:00:00,280 --> 00:00:05,600 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:04,800 --> 00:00:10,520 Speaker 2: George Noriy along with Richard C. Hoagland. Richards podcast is 3 00:00:10,560 --> 00:00:13,440 Speaker 2: called the Other Side of Midnight, which you can get 4 00:00:13,480 --> 00:00:15,680 Speaker 2: to well with his website, The Other Side of Midnight 5 00:00:15,720 --> 00:00:18,200 Speaker 2: dot Com. Richie, I'll let you wrap up about this 6 00:00:18,400 --> 00:00:20,960 Speaker 2: HD Space drive. Then I got to ask you about 7 00:00:20,960 --> 00:00:23,360 Speaker 2: this NASA moon rock in the Oval office. 8 00:00:23,560 --> 00:00:26,800 Speaker 3: Okay, let's move everybody over to the page where Lex 9 00:00:26,840 --> 00:00:30,560 Speaker 3: has gracefully put links and images. Can you tell everybody 10 00:00:30,560 --> 00:00:31,680 Speaker 3: how to get there? Yep. 11 00:00:31,720 --> 00:00:35,360 Speaker 2: We go to Coast tocoastam dot com in the carousel, 12 00:00:35,440 --> 00:00:39,120 Speaker 2: the revolving highlight reel. Click the first button and then 13 00:00:39,280 --> 00:00:43,640 Speaker 2: Richard's graphics will pop up. There's also a PDF file 14 00:00:43,720 --> 00:00:46,720 Speaker 2: there that you can click. It's there that as well. 15 00:00:46,760 --> 00:00:47,960 Speaker 1: Go ahead, rich Yeah. 16 00:00:47,760 --> 00:00:51,879 Speaker 3: The PDP is really high resolution. Okay, So everybody's on 17 00:00:51,920 --> 00:00:56,040 Speaker 3: that page at the top, Lex with the you know, 18 00:00:56,160 --> 00:01:00,720 Speaker 3: comparison micrograb. Item number one right end of the photo 19 00:01:01,040 --> 00:01:05,760 Speaker 3: is the link to the Forbes magazine article. And you 20 00:01:05,800 --> 00:01:09,840 Speaker 3: don't get into Forbes, George, unless you're real and a 21 00:01:10,080 --> 00:01:17,800 Speaker 3: hard nose three D money magazine newspaper whatever. So they've 22 00:01:17,840 --> 00:01:21,120 Speaker 3: done a very broad view of this whole amazing thing. 23 00:01:21,680 --> 00:01:24,400 Speaker 3: What they don't get into is the is the philosophy 24 00:01:24,880 --> 00:01:27,600 Speaker 3: that if this thing works, then everything we think we 25 00:01:27,720 --> 00:01:32,840 Speaker 3: know is wrong. There are more than three dimensions. That's 26 00:01:32,880 --> 00:01:36,280 Speaker 3: why I call it a hyperdimensional because even though certain 27 00:01:36,360 --> 00:01:42,119 Speaker 3: scientists like McCulloch and even the professional Pentagon Research Agency 28 00:01:42,200 --> 00:01:47,880 Speaker 3: called DARPA, the Advanced Research Projects Agency which the head 29 00:01:47,920 --> 00:01:52,120 Speaker 3: of this company IVO led him to develop the space 30 00:01:52,240 --> 00:01:57,080 Speaker 3: drive and put it aboard another company's space craft, which 31 00:01:57,120 --> 00:02:02,840 Speaker 3: then must launched into orbit on November eleventh, all that notwithstanding, 32 00:02:03,360 --> 00:02:07,360 Speaker 3: if this thing works, none of their three D theories does. 33 00:02:08,040 --> 00:02:11,960 Speaker 3: It's all arm waving because in our philosophy and in logic, 34 00:02:12,520 --> 00:02:16,359 Speaker 3: how can you put something in the middle of nowhere space, 35 00:02:17,240 --> 00:02:22,000 Speaker 3: have no engines, no fuel, flip a switch and have 36 00:02:22,080 --> 00:02:25,639 Speaker 3: it does somewhere and it works exactly? If it works, 37 00:02:25,680 --> 00:02:29,160 Speaker 3: it means everything founded on the idea that we're limited 38 00:02:29,400 --> 00:02:34,280 Speaker 3: to three dimensions through your space one of time is wrong, 39 00:02:35,120 --> 00:02:38,040 Speaker 3: and that opens up such a can of worms. George, 40 00:02:38,200 --> 00:02:39,680 Speaker 3: you and I are going to have to do twenty 41 00:02:39,720 --> 00:02:40,760 Speaker 3: more years of shows. 42 00:02:41,120 --> 00:02:45,240 Speaker 2: That's hope we can. I intend to that would put 43 00:02:45,280 --> 00:02:46,920 Speaker 2: you at about what one hundred and three. 44 00:02:47,120 --> 00:02:50,360 Speaker 3: Well, remember, with this breakthrough comes every breakthrough you can imagine, 45 00:02:50,360 --> 00:02:55,840 Speaker 3: including biology external, you know, extended aging, not getting old, 46 00:02:55,880 --> 00:02:59,280 Speaker 3: not getting infirm, you know, living as long as you want, 47 00:03:00,200 --> 00:03:02,160 Speaker 3: not trivial stuff. 48 00:03:03,240 --> 00:03:04,600 Speaker 2: How long has it been around? 49 00:03:05,160 --> 00:03:10,120 Speaker 3: They put it up on November eleventh. They're taking two 50 00:03:10,200 --> 00:03:14,320 Speaker 3: months of what we call baseline data, meaning you want 51 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:17,480 Speaker 3: everybody in the world who can track it to really 52 00:03:17,600 --> 00:03:21,400 Speaker 3: nail down the orbit because orbits in lower orbit tend 53 00:03:21,440 --> 00:03:25,600 Speaker 3: to shift a bit because of atmospheric drag, solar wind, 54 00:03:25,720 --> 00:03:30,360 Speaker 3: activity of players on the Sun. So you want to 55 00:03:30,400 --> 00:03:33,720 Speaker 3: get all that jiggle in an orbit where there's no 56 00:03:33,840 --> 00:03:37,960 Speaker 3: engine in this thing. None zero, and then you get 57 00:03:38,000 --> 00:03:41,440 Speaker 3: like two months they said, sixty days. We're coming up 58 00:03:42,120 --> 00:03:45,400 Speaker 3: like just before Christmas. Wouldn't it be amazing if they 59 00:03:45,520 --> 00:03:47,880 Speaker 3: just because they got so much good data, they flip 60 00:03:47,920 --> 00:03:53,600 Speaker 3: the switch before Christmas or between Christmas and New Year's 61 00:03:54,520 --> 00:03:58,960 Speaker 3: Can you think George of the bigger more astonishingly positive? 62 00:04:01,320 --> 00:04:03,440 Speaker 2: So I'm dropping the ball in times square? 63 00:04:03,760 --> 00:04:06,720 Speaker 3: Yes more. Then, Now let me tell you one very 64 00:04:06,840 --> 00:04:10,800 Speaker 3: practical application. It's not gonna happen tomorrow. It's not gonna 65 00:04:10,800 --> 00:04:13,440 Speaker 3: happen next year, but it could happen in five years. 66 00:04:14,240 --> 00:04:18,960 Speaker 3: If this technology works, they're calling it a quantum drive, 67 00:04:19,520 --> 00:04:23,719 Speaker 3: a quantum inertial drive because according to one of the 68 00:04:23,760 --> 00:04:28,480 Speaker 3: scientist's calculations, a guy named Mullick, what they're gonna do 69 00:04:28,560 --> 00:04:33,400 Speaker 3: with the electric field manipulation is basically change the inertia 70 00:04:33,720 --> 00:04:39,080 Speaker 3: of the spacecraft, and that's assumed under Einstein and Newton 71 00:04:39,400 --> 00:04:44,720 Speaker 3: to be inviolable. Not explained really by either guy, but inviolable. 72 00:04:45,520 --> 00:04:49,920 Speaker 3: My acutron measurements have said for decades that inertia can 73 00:04:50,000 --> 00:04:53,200 Speaker 3: be changed, and the background changes of the physics are 74 00:04:53,279 --> 00:04:57,240 Speaker 3: changing it all the time, and nobody's noticing because they're 75 00:04:57,279 --> 00:05:02,159 Speaker 3: not looking close enough. It doesn't affec everyday life. But 76 00:05:02,360 --> 00:05:04,840 Speaker 3: if this thing works, George, let me tell you why. 77 00:05:05,560 --> 00:05:08,440 Speaker 3: In five years, it could put an end to all 78 00:05:08,720 --> 00:05:13,520 Speaker 3: war on Earth. Let me say that again. If this 79 00:05:13,640 --> 00:05:17,880 Speaker 3: thing works, it could put an end to all war 80 00:05:18,440 --> 00:05:27,760 Speaker 3: on Earth. Sit down carefully. War depends on inertia, or 81 00:05:27,760 --> 00:05:31,239 Speaker 3: the flip side called momentum. When you drop a bomb 82 00:05:31,960 --> 00:05:36,120 Speaker 3: or you you know, you know, bomb a car as 83 00:05:36,160 --> 00:05:40,599 Speaker 3: a terrorist, or or you shoot somebody, the way of 84 00:05:40,800 --> 00:05:46,080 Speaker 3: death is through the transfer of momentum through inertia and 85 00:05:46,200 --> 00:05:50,239 Speaker 3: momentum of the shrapnel of the explosion or the bullet 86 00:05:50,480 --> 00:05:53,720 Speaker 3: of the weapon, the how it's as shell, et cetera, 87 00:05:53,760 --> 00:05:59,080 Speaker 3: et cetera. Okay, if you can change inertia in a 88 00:05:59,120 --> 00:06:03,279 Speaker 3: bubble or round a projector a technological device which hooks 89 00:06:03,279 --> 00:06:08,280 Speaker 3: into the hyper dimensional torsion field, you might be able 90 00:06:08,320 --> 00:06:13,560 Speaker 3: to create a gadget device to protect every city, every hamlet, 91 00:06:13,800 --> 00:06:18,720 Speaker 3: every country from bombardment by anybody, and within the country 92 00:06:19,000 --> 00:06:23,440 Speaker 3: to protect individuals with something you might wear as a 93 00:06:23,760 --> 00:06:28,800 Speaker 3: harness that literally would absorb the energy of bullets and 94 00:06:28,960 --> 00:06:32,760 Speaker 3: other projectiles by making inertia obsolete. 95 00:06:33,040 --> 00:06:33,839 Speaker 2: That's amazing. 96 00:06:34,240 --> 00:06:37,880 Speaker 3: Yes, we live at an amazing time, and they're gonna 97 00:06:37,920 --> 00:06:41,520 Speaker 3: test the damn thing sometime in the next month, maybe 98 00:06:41,520 --> 00:06:45,479 Speaker 3: sooner overhead even as we're talking tonight. Now, do you 99 00:06:45,560 --> 00:06:48,480 Speaker 3: see why I think this might be one of our 100 00:06:48,480 --> 00:06:49,840 Speaker 3: most important shows? 101 00:06:50,160 --> 00:06:52,120 Speaker 2: A yes, so far, so good. And why are you 102 00:06:52,160 --> 00:06:54,600 Speaker 2: so excited about a moon rock in the old velossit? 103 00:06:54,720 --> 00:06:57,840 Speaker 3: Yeah, Well, let me start at the beginning. Several months 104 00:06:57,839 --> 00:06:59,640 Speaker 3: ago I did a show with you where we talked 105 00:06:59,640 --> 00:07:06,640 Speaker 3: about major enterprise mission discoveries, the Lunar Stonehenge, which we've 106 00:07:06,640 --> 00:07:09,120 Speaker 3: got more data on, and I'll come back and do 107 00:07:09,200 --> 00:07:11,520 Speaker 3: all show on that. We're gonna do a whole show 108 00:07:11,840 --> 00:07:16,240 Speaker 3: on this artifact in Biden's Oval office on the thirtieth, 109 00:07:16,280 --> 00:07:20,400 Speaker 3: the night of Saturday the thirtieth, the night before New 110 00:07:20,480 --> 00:07:23,200 Speaker 3: Year's Eve. We're gonna do a whole three hours with 111 00:07:23,400 --> 00:07:27,160 Speaker 3: all the data. So you'll leave with absolutely no doubt 112 00:07:27,320 --> 00:07:29,400 Speaker 3: that Biden is sitting on an et artifact. 113 00:07:29,520 --> 00:07:31,400 Speaker 2: You will on the other side of midnight. 114 00:07:31,080 --> 00:07:32,400 Speaker 3: You mean, yeah, exactly. 115 00:07:32,640 --> 00:07:32,880 Speaker 2: Okay. 116 00:07:33,200 --> 00:07:36,840 Speaker 3: Anyway, so if you look back at Lex's page at 117 00:07:36,840 --> 00:07:40,800 Speaker 3: the very top, there is a two panel image left 118 00:07:40,800 --> 00:07:45,680 Speaker 3: and right. Those are what are called thin sections of 119 00:07:45,760 --> 00:07:48,400 Speaker 3: moon rocks that were brought back from the Moon by 120 00:07:48,440 --> 00:07:52,120 Speaker 3: all the Apollo missions. These images happen to be from 121 00:07:52,120 --> 00:07:55,400 Speaker 3: Apollo sixteen. Now, the rocks on the Moon are not 122 00:07:55,520 --> 00:07:58,440 Speaker 3: exactly like rocks on Earth. They are a mixture of 123 00:07:58,520 --> 00:08:02,280 Speaker 3: rocks on Earth, you know, from water processes. They're called sedimentary. 124 00:08:03,040 --> 00:08:07,320 Speaker 3: And then there's uh, you know, the the volcanic kind 125 00:08:07,360 --> 00:08:11,200 Speaker 3: of rocks that form when you have volcanoes and lava 126 00:08:11,320 --> 00:08:11,960 Speaker 3: and all that. 127 00:08:12,320 --> 00:08:14,080 Speaker 2: I like the case that the rock is in. 128 00:08:14,800 --> 00:08:16,560 Speaker 3: Say again, I like the case. 129 00:08:16,360 --> 00:08:17,200 Speaker 2: That the rock is. 130 00:08:17,360 --> 00:08:20,200 Speaker 3: I mean you mean the presidence. Yeah, well we're gonna 131 00:08:20,240 --> 00:08:23,800 Speaker 3: get to that. Okay. Look at the image that the 132 00:08:23,880 --> 00:08:27,000 Speaker 3: les has at the top of my image page. You 133 00:08:27,040 --> 00:08:27,520 Speaker 3: see that. 134 00:08:27,440 --> 00:08:31,640 Speaker 2: One, which one I've seen I'm working on the top 135 00:08:31,640 --> 00:08:34,640 Speaker 2: of the page that has all the stuff scattered around. 136 00:08:34,520 --> 00:08:38,800 Speaker 3: Exactly, Yeah, separate panels. These are small thin sections of 137 00:08:38,920 --> 00:08:43,679 Speaker 3: two Apollo sixteen moon rocks. Because most moon rocks are 138 00:08:43,720 --> 00:08:48,480 Speaker 3: smashed together from other rocks through impact that causes craters 139 00:08:48,520 --> 00:08:53,240 Speaker 3: by meteors, so you get what are called brescias. You know, 140 00:08:53,360 --> 00:08:56,040 Speaker 3: most of the rocks of the Moon are Brescia's, smashed 141 00:08:56,040 --> 00:09:01,880 Speaker 3: together rocks made of heat and pressure from impacts. When 142 00:09:01,920 --> 00:09:06,160 Speaker 3: you take these rocks and slice them apart in a 143 00:09:06,200 --> 00:09:11,400 Speaker 3: decent lab and look at the thin sections under a microscope, 144 00:09:12,000 --> 00:09:23,200 Speaker 3: you see little tiny machinery, geometric machinery, things, gadgets, technology, 145 00:09:24,320 --> 00:09:28,479 Speaker 3: and of course didn't see anything like that. And doctor Brandenburg, 146 00:09:28,559 --> 00:09:33,200 Speaker 3: you know, of course John Brandenburg, right, George, Oh yeah, well, 147 00:09:33,240 --> 00:09:35,360 Speaker 3: he's looked at these things and he has come to 148 00:09:35,480 --> 00:09:38,680 Speaker 3: the same inclusion. I have NASA brought back from the 149 00:09:38,720 --> 00:09:42,600 Speaker 3: Moon eight hundred and forty two pounds of rocks, most 150 00:09:42,600 --> 00:09:46,280 Speaker 3: of them brushes, though most of those rocks have not 151 00:09:46,400 --> 00:09:49,400 Speaker 3: been looked at. They've been put away and saved for 152 00:09:49,520 --> 00:09:53,400 Speaker 3: future generations when science will get better and better and better. 153 00:09:53,600 --> 00:09:55,679 Speaker 2: Did the astronauts know what they were picking up? 154 00:09:55,720 --> 00:09:59,160 Speaker 3: I have no idea. They just scooped up stuff, because 155 00:09:59,160 --> 00:10:03,120 Speaker 3: this stuff is all hidden behind crusts and blast damage 156 00:10:03,160 --> 00:10:06,520 Speaker 3: and micro meteorite pits. And you know, they just looked 157 00:10:06,600 --> 00:10:08,160 Speaker 3: like knobbly rocks. 158 00:10:08,600 --> 00:10:11,240 Speaker 2: Now, how did you come up with these conclusions? 159 00:10:11,480 --> 00:10:14,719 Speaker 3: Well? I was asked by Morning Star many many. 160 00:10:15,320 --> 00:10:17,480 Speaker 2: Months ago Friday Night. 161 00:10:17,520 --> 00:10:21,160 Speaker 3: But I understand you've got some good stuff. I was 162 00:10:21,200 --> 00:10:25,160 Speaker 3: asked by him why the cover of the Apollo sixteen 163 00:10:25,679 --> 00:10:30,280 Speaker 3: Preliminary Science Report on the Apollo sixty mission had a 164 00:10:30,280 --> 00:10:34,960 Speaker 3: black and white photograph that looked like geometry, And I 165 00:10:34,960 --> 00:10:36,680 Speaker 3: didn't want to give them a glib answer, so I 166 00:10:36,720 --> 00:10:40,800 Speaker 3: went and looked, and I suddenly had this incredible insight. 167 00:10:40,920 --> 00:10:45,120 Speaker 3: Oh my god, we're looking at tiny machines trapped in 168 00:10:45,160 --> 00:10:49,320 Speaker 3: the breshias, which when they're sawed into thin sections and 169 00:10:49,400 --> 00:10:54,800 Speaker 3: looked at, they reveal the machinery and circuits and all 170 00:10:55,400 --> 00:10:59,720 Speaker 3: screws and nuts and bolts and every imaginable you know, 171 00:11:00,120 --> 00:11:02,920 Speaker 3: a part to our technology on a big an. It's 172 00:11:03,080 --> 00:11:06,439 Speaker 3: tiny scale. Some of these little machines look at the 173 00:11:06,520 --> 00:11:11,640 Speaker 3: right panel, are incredibly tiny. That's about ten millimeters in 174 00:11:11,760 --> 00:11:13,600 Speaker 3: width of the sample. 175 00:11:13,760 --> 00:11:17,800 Speaker 2: Looks like a mechanic's bucket that was just dumped on George. 176 00:11:17,800 --> 00:11:23,680 Speaker 3: That's impossible. That is not possible by everything we think 177 00:11:23,720 --> 00:11:28,480 Speaker 3: we know from NASA about the Moon. Well, NASA has 178 00:11:28,520 --> 00:11:31,880 Speaker 3: been lying because you can't tell me that, you know, 179 00:11:31,960 --> 00:11:35,160 Speaker 3: petrologists that's the technical name for the scientists that look 180 00:11:35,160 --> 00:11:37,960 Speaker 3: at rocks that thin section and the look at them 181 00:11:38,240 --> 00:11:43,160 Speaker 3: in thin slices with polarized light and lasers and ion 182 00:11:43,280 --> 00:11:46,400 Speaker 3: beam microprobes and all kinds of good stuff like that. 183 00:11:46,920 --> 00:11:50,320 Speaker 3: You can't tell me they haven't figured this out, and 184 00:11:50,400 --> 00:11:55,040 Speaker 3: they've sat on it until we come along and we say, okay, 185 00:11:55,520 --> 00:12:01,880 Speaker 3: it's there, doctor Abby Lobe, mister exo archaeologists at Harvard. 186 00:12:02,400 --> 00:12:05,520 Speaker 3: We challenge you to ask NASA to give you some 187 00:12:05,600 --> 00:12:11,679 Speaker 3: of these samples, look at them totally independently, but in public, transparently, 188 00:12:12,360 --> 00:12:18,520 Speaker 3: and publish results that proved us wrong. Science, as Isaac 189 00:12:18,520 --> 00:12:22,160 Speaker 3: Asimov once said, is all about proving the other guy wrong, 190 00:12:23,320 --> 00:12:26,920 Speaker 3: and when you can't, then he's got to be right. 191 00:12:27,720 --> 00:12:30,360 Speaker 2: This picture The picture we're looking at was taken on 192 00:12:30,480 --> 00:12:30,880 Speaker 2: the moon. 193 00:12:31,240 --> 00:12:33,959 Speaker 3: Two two pictures, two pictures. I put them together. The 194 00:12:34,400 --> 00:12:37,040 Speaker 3: side by side, yeah, side by side, two separate rocks 195 00:12:37,160 --> 00:12:38,200 Speaker 3: for Paul sixteen. 196 00:12:40,280 --> 00:12:42,720 Speaker 2: The other one looks like some kind of spaceship blew up, 197 00:12:42,760 --> 00:12:45,840 Speaker 2: wasn't it? Pieces are scattered rot. 198 00:12:46,160 --> 00:12:46,400 Speaker 1: Yeah. 199 00:12:46,600 --> 00:12:47,360 Speaker 2: Unbelievable. 200 00:12:47,920 --> 00:12:50,440 Speaker 3: No, it's not. It's real. You're looking at it. The 201 00:12:50,480 --> 00:12:54,240 Speaker 3: only unbelievable part is the political non reaction of NASA, 202 00:12:54,600 --> 00:12:58,360 Speaker 3: the White House, the US government, the political establishment, the 203 00:12:58,440 --> 00:13:02,840 Speaker 3: academic establishment. Because this stuff's been sitting in our archives 204 00:13:02,960 --> 00:13:07,120 Speaker 3: under human possession for fifty years. 205 00:13:08,160 --> 00:13:10,600 Speaker 2: And you brought us a sample of a Smithsonian rock. 206 00:13:10,640 --> 00:13:11,240 Speaker 2: What's that all? 207 00:13:11,320 --> 00:13:16,560 Speaker 3: Okay? In the interim between Apollo, which was fifty years ago, 208 00:13:16,720 --> 00:13:22,920 Speaker 3: the only new sample as acquired of extraterrestra materials was 209 00:13:22,960 --> 00:13:28,240 Speaker 3: an unmanned robotic mission called Osiris REX. That name is 210 00:13:28,280 --> 00:13:31,680 Speaker 3: not accidental, by the way, that went to an asteroid 211 00:13:31,760 --> 00:13:37,440 Speaker 3: called the New took a seven year journey to get there, 212 00:13:38,000 --> 00:13:43,439 Speaker 3: to sample the asteroid, to package up in a vacuum 213 00:13:43,800 --> 00:13:49,280 Speaker 3: proof container. The sample almost a pound of material from 214 00:13:49,720 --> 00:13:53,199 Speaker 3: this asteroid, you know, millions of miles away, scoop it 215 00:13:53,280 --> 00:13:55,319 Speaker 3: up and take off, and then they brought it back 216 00:13:55,360 --> 00:13:57,240 Speaker 3: to Earth and it re entered the atmosphere of the 217 00:13:57,280 --> 00:14:01,400 Speaker 3: Earth on September twenty fourth of this year. Amazing technology, 218 00:14:01,559 --> 00:14:07,280 Speaker 3: amazing and it's been sitting in Houston in a special 219 00:14:07,480 --> 00:14:13,040 Speaker 3: laboratory designed to protect it until they with the right 220 00:14:13,120 --> 00:14:17,560 Speaker 3: tools and a biological clean room with ultra you know, 221 00:14:17,760 --> 00:14:21,920 Speaker 3: precautions for sterilization and you know, contamination and all that, 222 00:14:23,000 --> 00:14:25,680 Speaker 3: they open this thing up, take out the samples and 223 00:14:25,760 --> 00:14:28,760 Speaker 3: start sending them around to laboratories all over the world. 224 00:14:29,200 --> 00:14:32,680 Speaker 3: In this pristine condition, they're not going to use FedEx, 225 00:14:33,960 --> 00:14:37,240 Speaker 3: and they will then be analyzed by different countries, different scientists, 226 00:14:37,320 --> 00:14:41,280 Speaker 3: different institutions, different you know, universities, and there will be 227 00:14:41,360 --> 00:14:46,000 Speaker 3: big meetings about the first analysis of an asteroid sampled 228 00:14:46,320 --> 00:14:49,280 Speaker 3: by current state of the art technology here on Earth. 229 00:14:50,200 --> 00:14:53,600 Speaker 3: That's the idea, right, you would think, Okay, go to 230 00:14:54,520 --> 00:14:59,920 Speaker 3: my item number four. Lex didn't quite put one in sequence. 231 00:15:00,280 --> 00:15:01,680 Speaker 3: Go to number four. You see it? 232 00:15:02,280 --> 00:15:04,720 Speaker 2: What am I looking at? Which one number. 233 00:15:04,400 --> 00:15:07,920 Speaker 3: Four on an image page? To scroll down? 234 00:15:08,160 --> 00:15:12,520 Speaker 2: My numbers are cut off, My number sides are cut off. 235 00:15:13,080 --> 00:15:14,880 Speaker 3: Maybe your screen is too big. 236 00:15:16,560 --> 00:15:18,920 Speaker 2: But are you looking at these two rocks? Side by side. 237 00:15:19,600 --> 00:15:23,280 Speaker 3: No, no, no, no, that's the it's the link below that. Okay, 238 00:15:23,400 --> 00:15:26,520 Speaker 3: it's not a picture, it's a link to a news story. 239 00:15:26,840 --> 00:15:30,120 Speaker 2: Or the news story. Okay, number four Yeah, okay. It 240 00:15:30,160 --> 00:15:33,240 Speaker 2: says I was looking for a picture. I was looking 241 00:15:33,280 --> 00:15:33,840 Speaker 2: for a picture. 242 00:15:33,880 --> 00:15:35,240 Speaker 3: Well, you're going to go back up and look at 243 00:15:35,240 --> 00:15:39,160 Speaker 3: the picture. Neck. So it's been two months. The headline says, 244 00:15:39,600 --> 00:15:43,600 Speaker 3: why can't NASA open the damn astronauts sample container? I 245 00:15:43,680 --> 00:15:44,120 Speaker 3: added the. 246 00:15:44,160 --> 00:15:45,520 Speaker 2: Damn why can't they? 247 00:15:45,800 --> 00:15:48,840 Speaker 3: Their excuse is they can't find the right screwdriver. 248 00:15:50,120 --> 00:15:50,400 Speaker 2: What. 249 00:15:50,760 --> 00:15:56,560 Speaker 3: Yes, it's a dumb, stupid cover story. And the reason 250 00:15:56,600 --> 00:16:00,720 Speaker 3: I know is because when when Benu was sampled by 251 00:16:00,760 --> 00:16:05,480 Speaker 3: Osiris Rex, the sample arm collected so much material it 252 00:16:05,600 --> 00:16:10,000 Speaker 3: was spilling in zero gravity out into space, and they 253 00:16:10,080 --> 00:16:15,560 Speaker 3: quickly slammed the lid and they trapped some material inside 254 00:16:15,640 --> 00:16:19,520 Speaker 3: the cover, but not inside the sample container, which are 255 00:16:19,560 --> 00:16:23,680 Speaker 3: two separate compartments in the in the Osiris REX spacecraft. 256 00:16:24,720 --> 00:16:27,640 Speaker 3: So we were able to open the outside container but 257 00:16:27,760 --> 00:16:29,920 Speaker 3: not the inside sample container. 258 00:16:30,160 --> 00:16:31,560 Speaker 2: And whatever the sample is. 259 00:16:31,800 --> 00:16:32,960 Speaker 3: Wantch of stuff outside? 260 00:16:33,400 --> 00:16:36,320 Speaker 2: This sample doesn't look like something natural, that's for sure. 261 00:16:36,360 --> 00:16:37,000 Speaker 3: No, it's not. 262 00:16:39,280 --> 00:16:42,560 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 263 00:16:42,600 --> 00:16:45,840 Speaker 1: one am Eastern and go to coast to coastam dot 264 00:16:45,880 --> 00:16:46,680 Speaker 1: com for more