1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:03,400 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on 2 00:00:03,680 --> 00:00:05,280 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio and. 3 00:00:05,360 --> 00:00:07,720 Speaker 2: Welcome back to Coast to Coast George Nori with you 4 00:00:07,760 --> 00:00:10,319 Speaker 2: along with Brad Olsen. His website is linked up at 5 00:00:10,360 --> 00:00:13,880 Speaker 2: Coast tocoastam dot com. Brad, there are a lot of 6 00:00:13,920 --> 00:00:17,360 Speaker 2: megaliths underwater. How did they get there? What happened? 7 00:00:19,079 --> 00:00:22,880 Speaker 3: That's a good question, George. How do you create a 8 00:00:22,960 --> 00:00:26,240 Speaker 3: megalith under the ocean? Well, that could only really happen 9 00:00:26,280 --> 00:00:28,600 Speaker 3: when the sea levels were much lower than they are, 10 00:00:29,280 --> 00:00:32,600 Speaker 3: and that's dating us back to at least twelve thousand 11 00:00:32,680 --> 00:00:36,720 Speaker 3: years ago, during the last Ice Age, when a lot 12 00:00:36,760 --> 00:00:40,440 Speaker 3: of these could have been created. So, like Graham Hancock says, 13 00:00:40,760 --> 00:00:44,839 Speaker 3: everything keeps getting dated, older and older and older. I 14 00:00:44,880 --> 00:00:48,320 Speaker 3: would say that's true with the megaliths too. They can't 15 00:00:48,360 --> 00:00:51,440 Speaker 3: be carbon dated. But when you look at the technology 16 00:00:51,440 --> 00:00:54,520 Speaker 3: that put into them, we're still playing ketchup trying to 17 00:00:55,160 --> 00:00:56,800 Speaker 3: match that technology today. 18 00:00:57,480 --> 00:01:00,400 Speaker 2: How big are some of these underwater megaliths. 19 00:01:00,880 --> 00:01:04,000 Speaker 3: Well, some of the bigger ones are in the Dimini roads. 20 00:01:04,560 --> 00:01:10,000 Speaker 3: It's an L shaped megalithic structure. Now, Mother Nature doesn't 21 00:01:10,040 --> 00:01:15,080 Speaker 3: create perfect right angles stacked up against each other, that's 22 00:01:15,120 --> 00:01:17,920 Speaker 3: a big one. Then there's another one in Yonaguni, which 23 00:01:17,959 --> 00:01:20,920 Speaker 3: is actually carved right out of the living rock that 24 00:01:21,040 --> 00:01:25,080 Speaker 3: for a long time National Geographic said, no way, that's 25 00:01:25,160 --> 00:01:27,959 Speaker 3: just a natural formation. But then they had to change 26 00:01:27,959 --> 00:01:31,480 Speaker 3: their mind because it was clearly carved right out of 27 00:01:31,520 --> 00:01:34,320 Speaker 3: the rock. And that's an island in the southern Okinawa 28 00:01:34,360 --> 00:01:36,920 Speaker 3: Islands of Japan, just north of Taiwan. 29 00:01:38,480 --> 00:01:41,679 Speaker 2: Lloyd Pie used to carry with him an elongated skull. 30 00:01:41,880 --> 00:01:46,280 Speaker 2: Remember that, Oh, I sure do, starchild yep absolutely. Now 31 00:01:46,280 --> 00:01:49,520 Speaker 2: what about these elongated skulls that have seen all around 32 00:01:49,600 --> 00:01:53,280 Speaker 2: the different areas of Central America. 33 00:01:54,240 --> 00:01:58,240 Speaker 3: Yes, Central America, South America, here in North America as 34 00:01:58,280 --> 00:02:04,240 Speaker 3: well around the Black Sea region to China, even Southeast Asia. Now, 35 00:02:04,280 --> 00:02:08,560 Speaker 3: these elongated skulls are very unique. I've seen them in 36 00:02:08,600 --> 00:02:13,120 Speaker 3: a museum in the Sacred Valley of Peru. Their heads 37 00:02:13,880 --> 00:02:18,840 Speaker 3: are thirty percent larger than a human skull. And I'll 38 00:02:18,880 --> 00:02:23,120 Speaker 3: show the comparison to my talk. If you try to 39 00:02:23,400 --> 00:02:26,720 Speaker 3: bind a head or put a board on it and 40 00:02:26,880 --> 00:02:29,560 Speaker 3: wrap it up, yeah, you can change the structure of 41 00:02:29,600 --> 00:02:33,400 Speaker 3: a skull. What what you cannot do is add thirty 42 00:02:33,440 --> 00:02:38,560 Speaker 3: percent cranial capacity and thirty percent larger brain size, so 43 00:02:38,600 --> 00:02:41,480 Speaker 3: they're human like George, but they're not quite human. So 44 00:02:41,600 --> 00:02:45,480 Speaker 3: for example, they also have thirty percent larger eye sockets, 45 00:02:45,960 --> 00:02:49,239 Speaker 3: they don't have the central crack, the suture in the 46 00:02:49,520 --> 00:02:54,240 Speaker 3: front of the forehead, and their spinal cord comes up 47 00:02:54,320 --> 00:02:59,440 Speaker 3: into the body also thirty percent larger. So you do 48 00:02:59,520 --> 00:03:04,480 Speaker 3: the math. Thirty percent larger head, thirty percent larger body, 49 00:03:04,880 --> 00:03:09,720 Speaker 3: more cranial capacity, meaning they could be smarter than humans. 50 00:03:09,880 --> 00:03:12,760 Speaker 2: Yeah. Yeah, Are they alien? 51 00:03:14,000 --> 00:03:16,560 Speaker 3: Well, that's what we were talking about earlier. Maybe they 52 00:03:16,600 --> 00:03:20,720 Speaker 3: were the offspring of the Ananaki the nephel Im, and 53 00:03:21,400 --> 00:03:24,119 Speaker 3: were they alien? Well, it seems so. We don't see 54 00:03:24,160 --> 00:03:27,000 Speaker 3: them walking around too much in the world today, but 55 00:03:27,880 --> 00:03:30,880 Speaker 3: maybe there are some that still exists. Now. 56 00:03:30,919 --> 00:03:33,320 Speaker 2: There are some that say the culture of that time 57 00:03:34,120 --> 00:03:38,040 Speaker 2: forced them to elongate human skulls. I'm not sure about that. 58 00:03:38,080 --> 00:03:38,760 Speaker 2: What do you think? 59 00:03:39,920 --> 00:03:42,080 Speaker 3: Yeah, I don't think the culture could do that either. 60 00:03:42,280 --> 00:03:46,520 Speaker 3: I've seen the exhibits, and I've studied some of the 61 00:03:46,560 --> 00:03:50,400 Speaker 3: tribal people like the Nez Pierce and the Flathead Indians 62 00:03:50,640 --> 00:03:55,520 Speaker 3: of Idaho. Yeah, and they did cranial deformation, but again, 63 00:03:55,600 --> 00:03:59,440 Speaker 3: you can't create thirty percent larger skull or brain matter. 64 00:04:01,120 --> 00:04:03,000 Speaker 2: When did you go to Antarctica. 65 00:04:03,840 --> 00:04:06,640 Speaker 3: I was down there five and a half years ago, 66 00:04:07,480 --> 00:04:12,240 Speaker 3: and it was a sailboat trip across the Drake Passage, 67 00:04:12,320 --> 00:04:15,280 Speaker 3: one of the stormiest seas in the world. Georgie. I 68 00:04:15,320 --> 00:04:17,839 Speaker 3: wouldn't recommend it to you or any of your listeners. 69 00:04:17,920 --> 00:04:21,560 Speaker 3: It's a really rough passage. I think I lost twenty 70 00:04:21,560 --> 00:04:24,040 Speaker 3: five pounds on that trip because I was seasick for 71 00:04:24,360 --> 00:04:25,080 Speaker 3: several days. 72 00:04:25,160 --> 00:04:27,560 Speaker 2: Oh geez, they food down Oh yeah. 73 00:04:27,400 --> 00:04:30,000 Speaker 3: It was dreadful. But once we were down there, it 74 00:04:30,080 --> 00:04:33,080 Speaker 3: was amazing. It's like you're not even on Earth. You're 75 00:04:33,120 --> 00:04:34,680 Speaker 3: on a frozen planet somewhere. 76 00:04:35,680 --> 00:04:38,800 Speaker 2: What's the weather like, Well. 77 00:04:38,560 --> 00:04:41,760 Speaker 3: It's mostly pretty cold. I mean we were wearing our 78 00:04:42,279 --> 00:04:44,960 Speaker 3: winter clothes and it was the middle of summer. However, 79 00:04:45,080 --> 00:04:47,120 Speaker 3: there are a couple of days when it did actually 80 00:04:47,160 --> 00:04:52,640 Speaker 3: get sunny and sunny enough to do the infamous polar plunge, 81 00:04:52,680 --> 00:04:56,400 Speaker 3: that is jumping in the ocean among the icebergs and 82 00:04:56,440 --> 00:04:59,200 Speaker 3: the penguins, just to say you did it, and I 83 00:04:59,240 --> 00:05:00,480 Speaker 3: did it three times. 84 00:05:01,640 --> 00:05:03,400 Speaker 2: See anything unusual out there? 85 00:05:04,200 --> 00:05:08,000 Speaker 3: So that was the thing, and we were looking for 86 00:05:08,720 --> 00:05:13,279 Speaker 3: anything of an antediluvian such as megalists, the pyramids poking 87 00:05:13,320 --> 00:05:17,440 Speaker 3: through the ice. Maybe anyone with knowledge of the three 88 00:05:17,880 --> 00:05:21,040 Speaker 3: massive ships that are down there that are intelligence agency 89 00:05:21,120 --> 00:05:24,480 Speaker 3: is nicknamed Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria. The way back 90 00:05:24,520 --> 00:05:26,520 Speaker 3: in the seventies, they known about these places, and I 91 00:05:26,600 --> 00:05:29,680 Speaker 3: think I've been able to pinpoint at least one of them, 92 00:05:29,720 --> 00:05:32,000 Speaker 3: which I'm going to bring up in my workshop at 93 00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:34,880 Speaker 3: Contact in the Desert. And do you remember when we 94 00:05:34,960 --> 00:05:39,320 Speaker 3: first talked about Antarcticon Beyond Belief, George, you were saying, 95 00:05:40,080 --> 00:05:42,320 Speaker 3: why did they need a big no fly zone over 96 00:05:42,360 --> 00:05:44,960 Speaker 3: the South Pole because nobody goes down there. There's no 97 00:05:45,040 --> 00:05:48,040 Speaker 3: flights down there, And I said, yeah, exactly, but there 98 00:05:48,240 --> 00:05:50,400 Speaker 3: is a big no fly zone, and that could be 99 00:05:51,400 --> 00:05:54,200 Speaker 3: the cover for a giant hole in the ice. That's 100 00:05:54,240 --> 00:05:58,600 Speaker 3: what was reported by Admiral Bird as an aviator, the 101 00:05:58,640 --> 00:06:03,480 Speaker 3: first Islot fly over the sal Pole, reported this and 102 00:06:03,600 --> 00:06:07,000 Speaker 3: wrote about it in his diary when he returned right 103 00:06:07,040 --> 00:06:11,000 Speaker 3: before the Battle of High Jump during Operation high Jump. 104 00:06:11,400 --> 00:06:14,280 Speaker 2: Maybe that's truly journey to the center of the Earth. 105 00:06:14,080 --> 00:06:19,520 Speaker 3: Huh, About as much as you could make, at least 106 00:06:19,760 --> 00:06:25,120 Speaker 3: without going under ground. You see, because upon the salth 107 00:06:25,160 --> 00:06:28,200 Speaker 3: Pole that is what's known as the Polar Plateau, and 108 00:06:28,200 --> 00:06:32,760 Speaker 3: the ice is two miles thick. Well. Antarctica is the 109 00:06:32,800 --> 00:06:36,760 Speaker 3: most volcanically active continent in the world. There's ninety one 110 00:06:36,880 --> 00:06:41,919 Speaker 3: known volcanoes, so the geothermal activity would have the propensity 111 00:06:41,960 --> 00:06:46,520 Speaker 3: of creating large domes under the ice. In fact, they're 112 00:06:46,560 --> 00:06:51,760 Speaker 3: still finding lakes and flowing rivers and even new life 113 00:06:51,760 --> 00:06:53,320 Speaker 3: forms that exist down there. 114 00:06:54,440 --> 00:06:56,880 Speaker 2: And of course with gravity, you don't know, but you're 115 00:06:56,920 --> 00:06:58,720 Speaker 2: literally standing upside down. 116 00:07:00,680 --> 00:07:03,080 Speaker 3: Yeah, you would know it, but I guess technically you are. 117 00:07:04,440 --> 00:07:05,359 Speaker 2: Would you go back? 118 00:07:06,480 --> 00:07:10,000 Speaker 3: I would go back. In fact, I'm working with a 119 00:07:10,040 --> 00:07:15,080 Speaker 3: group called JC Cross of venture capital company I'm sorry 120 00:07:15,200 --> 00:07:17,680 Speaker 3: VC Cross, and we're looking to raise the money to 121 00:07:17,800 --> 00:07:21,040 Speaker 3: create a documentary which I would go down there and 122 00:07:21,680 --> 00:07:25,760 Speaker 3: this time be able to travel inside the continent. So, 123 00:07:25,920 --> 00:07:29,000 Speaker 3: for example, I'd like to go to those pyramids we've 124 00:07:29,000 --> 00:07:32,480 Speaker 3: seen on Ancient Aliens and other shows in the Ellsworth 125 00:07:32,560 --> 00:07:36,560 Speaker 3: Mountain range and just investigate it. Let's say, maybe it 126 00:07:36,640 --> 00:07:39,080 Speaker 3: is just a nun attack, which is an attractive mountain 127 00:07:39,120 --> 00:07:43,240 Speaker 3: poking through the ice. But what if it was manufactured 128 00:07:43,280 --> 00:07:46,400 Speaker 3: by some kind of intelligence. George, that's a game changer. 129 00:07:46,800 --> 00:07:50,440 Speaker 3: I think disclosure could come from Antarctica with any one 130 00:07:50,480 --> 00:07:51,680 Speaker 3: of these discoveries. 131 00:07:52,400 --> 00:07:56,640 Speaker 2: They say the Nazis had an undersea base where Hitler 132 00:07:56,680 --> 00:07:59,640 Speaker 2: fled to it originally before he went to South America. 133 00:08:02,040 --> 00:08:06,280 Speaker 3: Yeah, it's quite possible. Maybe Hitler didn't go directly to 134 00:08:06,440 --> 00:08:10,040 Speaker 3: Antarctica after the war, because there was reports of him 135 00:08:10,240 --> 00:08:16,440 Speaker 3: coming ashore at Mara Plata near Buenos Aires and then 136 00:08:16,480 --> 00:08:19,360 Speaker 3: going to a location that I visited on the trip 137 00:08:19,480 --> 00:08:24,480 Speaker 3: down to Antarctica. I went to all these reported Nazi hideouts, 138 00:08:24,480 --> 00:08:29,000 Speaker 3: including a town called Lafalda. And we've all heard of Bariloche. 139 00:08:29,320 --> 00:08:32,839 Speaker 3: That George is like stepping into a Barbarian town down there, 140 00:08:32,880 --> 00:08:35,800 Speaker 3: and everybody speaks German, and you can get some Wiener 141 00:08:35,840 --> 00:08:40,679 Speaker 3: schnetzel for lunch and scrudle for dessert. It's very Germanic 142 00:08:40,760 --> 00:08:45,079 Speaker 3: down there. And a lot of other top Nazis definitely 143 00:08:45,200 --> 00:08:50,080 Speaker 3: did escape, including Martin Borman, who kept popping up all 144 00:08:50,120 --> 00:08:52,680 Speaker 3: through the nineteen fifties, and he was the money man 145 00:08:53,559 --> 00:08:57,720 Speaker 3: for the Third Reich, which set up corporations and shell 146 00:08:57,840 --> 00:09:02,160 Speaker 3: companies and investments all over the place. And this is 147 00:09:02,200 --> 00:09:05,800 Speaker 3: what some researchers in the field called the Fourth Reich, 148 00:09:06,400 --> 00:09:09,880 Speaker 3: that it's more of an intelligence gathering rather than the 149 00:09:09,920 --> 00:09:14,839 Speaker 3: standing armies of Germany. That they were an intelligence group 150 00:09:15,840 --> 00:09:20,120 Speaker 3: with these vast resources, because a lot of money drained 151 00:09:20,120 --> 00:09:23,600 Speaker 3: out of Europe after World War Two, including many palettes 152 00:09:23,640 --> 00:09:28,000 Speaker 3: of gold and priceless artifacts and paintings. And Martin Borman 153 00:09:28,160 --> 00:09:30,000 Speaker 3: was the money man, he was controlling it all, and 154 00:09:30,040 --> 00:09:33,040 Speaker 3: they were making investments in other corporations, and of course 155 00:09:33,440 --> 00:09:37,199 Speaker 3: in America you had Project paper Clip bringing over these 156 00:09:37,280 --> 00:09:43,160 Speaker 3: Nazi scientists and officers who became integrated into our corporation 157 00:09:43,400 --> 00:09:44,880 Speaker 3: and government agencies too. 158 00:09:45,200 --> 00:09:47,400 Speaker 2: They got us into space, didn't they. 159 00:09:48,200 --> 00:09:51,840 Speaker 3: Well else Werner von Braun and Herban Oberet And when 160 00:09:52,520 --> 00:09:56,080 Speaker 3: asked where did Germany get all this technology so rapidly, 161 00:09:56,760 --> 00:09:59,880 Speaker 3: herman Orberitz said, well, we had help from our friends above. 162 00:10:01,240 --> 00:10:03,680 Speaker 2: There's always been talk about that there's a map called 163 00:10:03,679 --> 00:10:08,080 Speaker 2: the Pirie Reece Map p I R IRIS. Oh yeah, 164 00:10:08,200 --> 00:10:09,599 Speaker 2: what makes it so unusual? 165 00:10:10,480 --> 00:10:13,360 Speaker 3: Well, what's so unusual is not only was it created 166 00:10:13,400 --> 00:10:17,720 Speaker 3: only twenty years after Columbus made his first voyage, but 167 00:10:17,840 --> 00:10:22,120 Speaker 3: it shows the perfect outline of South America as well 168 00:10:22,200 --> 00:10:26,760 Speaker 3: as connecting down to Antarctica. But what makes the Pirie 169 00:10:26,800 --> 00:10:32,280 Speaker 3: Reef map. Really fascinating is it shows Antarctica before the 170 00:10:32,360 --> 00:10:38,400 Speaker 3: ice and now they're doing sonar radar across the Larsen 171 00:10:38,559 --> 00:10:41,800 Speaker 3: Ice shelf George, which had depicted on the Pirie Reef 172 00:10:41,920 --> 00:10:46,600 Speaker 3: map without ice, and finding those islands on the map 173 00:10:47,080 --> 00:10:52,360 Speaker 3: are under the ice. So it was clearly drawn, probably 174 00:10:52,400 --> 00:10:55,000 Speaker 3: from source maps. In fact that the liner notes of 175 00:10:55,080 --> 00:10:58,360 Speaker 3: the Purie Reef map it does say that the source 176 00:10:58,400 --> 00:11:04,200 Speaker 3: maps came from the library of Alexandria and Potomac, Greece, 177 00:11:04,559 --> 00:11:09,480 Speaker 3: so way back in the classical era that these maps 178 00:11:09,800 --> 00:11:13,080 Speaker 3: were handed down and many of them preserved in the 179 00:11:13,080 --> 00:11:16,360 Speaker 3: library of Alexandria, and I would dare to say maybe 180 00:11:16,400 --> 00:11:19,439 Speaker 3: some of them still exist in the Vatican library. 181 00:11:20,600 --> 00:11:26,440 Speaker 2: That's interesting. And the map that shows these islands also 182 00:11:26,559 --> 00:11:30,280 Speaker 2: could only have been seen from above, right, Well, that's. 183 00:11:30,160 --> 00:11:33,040 Speaker 3: Yeah, that's it. That's the other thing that's so peculiar 184 00:11:33,080 --> 00:11:37,559 Speaker 3: about it. And it shows the correct proportion of Western 185 00:11:37,679 --> 00:11:42,160 Speaker 3: Africa and eastern South America proportion meaning the size of 186 00:11:42,200 --> 00:11:45,160 Speaker 3: the Atlantic Ocean in between, So that too would have 187 00:11:45,360 --> 00:11:47,680 Speaker 3: best been surveyed from above. 188 00:11:49,000 --> 00:11:51,400 Speaker 2: All these things that are happening on the planet bread, 189 00:11:51,559 --> 00:11:54,240 Speaker 2: why are we just beginning to find out what they are. 190 00:11:55,160 --> 00:11:56,520 Speaker 2: Why is it taken so long? 191 00:11:57,240 --> 00:12:00,679 Speaker 3: Yeah, I think there was a concerted effort to disguise 192 00:12:00,800 --> 00:12:04,080 Speaker 3: all this evidence, and for example, with the giants, it 193 00:12:04,240 --> 00:12:07,920 Speaker 3: just didn't go along with the narrative. And even though 194 00:12:07,960 --> 00:12:11,400 Speaker 3: this evidence was being found, there's countless stories of the 195 00:12:11,440 --> 00:12:16,920 Speaker 3: Smithsonian Institute coming into giant digs and confiscating the bones 196 00:12:16,960 --> 00:12:19,800 Speaker 3: and they say they just threw them in the Atlantic Ocean, 197 00:12:19,880 --> 00:12:21,679 Speaker 3: just get them out of here. They just didn't want 198 00:12:21,720 --> 00:12:23,880 Speaker 3: to deal with it. So I think so much of 199 00:12:23,920 --> 00:12:28,840 Speaker 3: our history has just been manipulated. So we don't think 200 00:12:28,920 --> 00:12:31,839 Speaker 3: that there was this high tech civilization on the Earth, 201 00:12:31,880 --> 00:12:35,280 Speaker 3: for example, or these giants that once roam the earth. 202 00:12:36,559 --> 00:12:38,800 Speaker 2: What is it brand that got you interested in all 203 00:12:38,840 --> 00:12:40,160 Speaker 2: these topics. 204 00:12:41,520 --> 00:12:45,200 Speaker 3: Well, it's our real history. It's who we are as 205 00:12:45,200 --> 00:12:48,280 Speaker 3: a human race on this planet. And anytime there's a 206 00:12:48,320 --> 00:12:51,960 Speaker 3: form of censorship that goes against what I believe in, 207 00:12:52,400 --> 00:12:55,679 Speaker 3: and I know you too, because we're trying to just 208 00:12:56,240 --> 00:12:58,040 Speaker 3: we're just trying to get to the truth. We just 209 00:12:58,080 --> 00:13:01,400 Speaker 3: want to know what evidence is out there and piece 210 00:13:01,480 --> 00:13:04,240 Speaker 3: together this mosaic of who we are as humans on 211 00:13:04,280 --> 00:13:07,320 Speaker 3: this planet. And so I just want to I just 212 00:13:07,360 --> 00:13:12,160 Speaker 3: want disclosure. I just want to be revealed transparency in 213 00:13:12,640 --> 00:13:16,080 Speaker 3: all this evidence. And it takes people like you to 214 00:13:16,120 --> 00:13:21,199 Speaker 3: do coast to coast and speaking at these conferences to 215 00:13:20,440 --> 00:13:23,480 Speaker 3: get the word out to the mass amount of people. 216 00:13:24,440 --> 00:13:26,480 Speaker 2: And so many people are interested in this. 217 00:13:27,440 --> 00:13:30,199 Speaker 3: Oh, it's only going to keep growing, George Rich just 218 00:13:30,240 --> 00:13:33,960 Speaker 3: a tip of the iceberg, because this information is starting 219 00:13:34,000 --> 00:13:36,880 Speaker 3: to get out there and people are seeing it for themselves. 220 00:13:36,960 --> 00:13:39,720 Speaker 3: I'll tell you when I went to see those innglongated 221 00:13:39,760 --> 00:13:42,360 Speaker 3: skulls in South America. When you see it with your 222 00:13:42,360 --> 00:13:45,719 Speaker 3: own eyes, seeing is believing, and you don't go back 223 00:13:45,960 --> 00:13:48,320 Speaker 3: not saying, oh, well, now I don't believe in giants 224 00:13:48,400 --> 00:13:50,800 Speaker 3: or these elongated skulls. No, I saw it with my 225 00:13:50,880 --> 00:13:52,720 Speaker 3: own eyes. Of course, it's going to stay with me 226 00:13:52,760 --> 00:13:53,760 Speaker 3: for the rest of my life. 227 00:13:54,960 --> 00:13:57,800 Speaker 2: Back to the plan of jars and laws. What's the 228 00:13:57,880 --> 00:13:59,640 Speaker 2: smallest jar that you saw? 229 00:14:01,720 --> 00:14:04,680 Speaker 3: Spallst geez. I don't think there were any under a 230 00:14:04,760 --> 00:14:05,600 Speaker 3: meter and a half. 231 00:14:06,480 --> 00:14:08,000 Speaker 2: They're all pretty big, aren't they. 232 00:14:08,120 --> 00:14:09,199 Speaker 3: They're all really big. 233 00:14:09,320 --> 00:14:12,640 Speaker 2: Yeah, absolutely scattered all over the place. If you look 234 00:14:12,679 --> 00:14:14,920 Speaker 2: at them from the countryside, can you see them pop 235 00:14:15,000 --> 00:14:15,800 Speaker 2: up everywhere? 236 00:14:16,720 --> 00:14:20,480 Speaker 3: Not really, because it's pretty hilly and Jungly. But the 237 00:14:20,560 --> 00:14:24,680 Speaker 3: one location called Site One where the World Heritage Museum 238 00:14:24,840 --> 00:14:29,160 Speaker 3: is and visitor center, there are well over one hundred intact. 239 00:14:29,280 --> 00:14:33,000 Speaker 3: Some are blown up and then there's those talk marks 240 00:14:33,040 --> 00:14:37,440 Speaker 3: from all the bombing craters. But I have the map, 241 00:14:37,520 --> 00:14:40,440 Speaker 3: and if I had more time, I could have rented 242 00:14:40,440 --> 00:14:43,800 Speaker 3: a motorcycle and gone driving around. Some of them are 243 00:14:43,800 --> 00:14:48,640 Speaker 3: on the top of hilltops, others are deep in the jungle. 244 00:14:49,320 --> 00:14:53,000 Speaker 3: But yeah, this one area of lows maybe one hundred 245 00:14:53,000 --> 00:14:56,920 Speaker 3: square miles. All the way around, they just pop up everywhere. 246 00:14:57,440 --> 00:14:59,840 Speaker 2: Would you recommend that if people had the ability to 247 00:14:59,880 --> 00:15:03,720 Speaker 2: do explore, they should go to these places? 248 00:15:04,840 --> 00:15:09,120 Speaker 3: Oh? Absolutely. Travel to me has been the biggest education 249 00:15:09,200 --> 00:15:12,080 Speaker 3: I've ever had. In fact, I started my career as 250 00:15:12,080 --> 00:15:15,040 Speaker 3: a travel writer. My very first book, called World Stompers, 251 00:15:15,560 --> 00:15:17,880 Speaker 3: was all about telling people how to do their own 252 00:15:17,920 --> 00:15:21,480 Speaker 3: trips inexpensively and safely and if you have to work 253 00:15:21,520 --> 00:15:24,240 Speaker 3: your way around the world to do it. And I 254 00:15:24,400 --> 00:15:29,720 Speaker 3: encourage it to everybody, especially young people right out of college. 255 00:15:29,840 --> 00:15:32,360 Speaker 3: Just do it while you have that opportunity, and it 256 00:15:32,400 --> 00:15:35,080 Speaker 3: will be such an eye opening opportunity. 257 00:15:35,800 --> 00:15:37,800 Speaker 2: Where would you not go a brand. 258 00:15:39,120 --> 00:15:40,320 Speaker 3: A war zone? 259 00:15:40,840 --> 00:15:43,760 Speaker 2: Yeah, I don't blame you there now. 260 00:15:44,040 --> 00:15:45,480 Speaker 3: I'm too big of a target for that. 261 00:15:45,960 --> 00:15:48,600 Speaker 2: And unfortunately, there are too many of those war zones 262 00:15:48,640 --> 00:15:52,400 Speaker 2: all over the country and all over the planet huh yeah. 263 00:15:52,440 --> 00:15:55,840 Speaker 3: And some countries they just won't let you in or 264 00:15:56,120 --> 00:15:58,840 Speaker 3: you might risk your life if you try to go 265 00:15:58,840 --> 00:16:02,560 Speaker 3: to Iran or some of these war torn countries in 266 00:16:02,560 --> 00:16:06,080 Speaker 3: the Middle East. Unfortunately, assist am not a good situation 267 00:16:06,200 --> 00:16:06,640 Speaker 3: right now. 268 00:16:06,840 --> 00:16:10,080 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 269 00:16:10,120 --> 00:16:13,400 Speaker 1: one am Eastern and go to Coast to coastam dot 270 00:16:13,400 --> 00:16:14,160 Speaker 1: com for more