1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:04,640 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:04,920 --> 00:00:08,200 Speaker 2: But welcome back to George Nori along with Mark D'Antonio. Mark, 3 00:00:08,320 --> 00:00:11,719 Speaker 2: let's talk about these USOS. Give us your definition of that. 4 00:00:11,840 --> 00:00:14,000 Speaker 2: First of all, sure. 5 00:00:14,040 --> 00:00:17,280 Speaker 3: An unknown submerged object is just that it's an object 6 00:00:18,079 --> 00:00:22,480 Speaker 3: that's a UFO but basically underwater. And the idea is 7 00:00:22,920 --> 00:00:25,680 Speaker 3: can they operate underwater like they can operate in the air. 8 00:00:26,320 --> 00:00:29,120 Speaker 3: And the answer seems to be a resounding yes. 9 00:00:31,200 --> 00:00:34,280 Speaker 2: Are they hiding in the water, are there bases there? 10 00:00:34,400 --> 00:00:35,159 Speaker 2: What's going on? 11 00:00:36,240 --> 00:00:38,800 Speaker 3: You know, that's actually a very good question to ask. 12 00:00:38,880 --> 00:00:42,559 Speaker 3: I'll tell you why. If we look at some of 13 00:00:42,600 --> 00:00:44,800 Speaker 3: the theories in the past, people said, oh, they're hiding 14 00:00:44,920 --> 00:00:47,240 Speaker 3: on the moon, they're on the back side of the moon, 15 00:00:47,680 --> 00:00:51,600 Speaker 3: or they're in the perpetually dark crater. And you know, 16 00:00:51,720 --> 00:00:55,280 Speaker 3: that could make sense if you know your oceans, but 17 00:00:55,400 --> 00:00:58,400 Speaker 3: we don't. We only know sixteen percent of our oceans. 18 00:00:58,600 --> 00:01:01,680 Speaker 3: That's literally all we know. And people make to get 19 00:01:01,720 --> 00:01:04,560 Speaker 3: this false assumption we know the oceans when they look 20 00:01:04,600 --> 00:01:07,040 Speaker 3: at Google Earth and they see ocean everywhere they look. 21 00:01:07,080 --> 00:01:09,880 Speaker 3: When they say, oh, look at the ocean floor, that's 22 00:01:10,160 --> 00:01:13,320 Speaker 3: a lot of that's interpreted data and very very coarsely 23 00:01:13,840 --> 00:01:19,520 Speaker 3: obtained data. It's not very very detailed except for your 24 00:01:19,640 --> 00:01:23,280 Speaker 3: very few places. So if they're in the oceans, they're 25 00:01:23,280 --> 00:01:26,720 Speaker 3: there because they can be and they can utilize their 26 00:01:26,720 --> 00:01:32,040 Speaker 3: technology to be there without a harm to themselves. And 27 00:01:32,080 --> 00:01:34,240 Speaker 3: there's a whole reason how they can do that. It's 28 00:01:34,280 --> 00:01:39,520 Speaker 3: an interdimensional travel methodology actually that has been around for 29 00:01:39,600 --> 00:01:44,720 Speaker 3: a long time. But being there, they can actually hide 30 00:01:44,760 --> 00:01:47,320 Speaker 3: from us because they go and as I always say, 31 00:01:47,640 --> 00:01:50,840 Speaker 3: they go where we are not and we are not 32 00:01:50,960 --> 00:01:53,640 Speaker 3: on the bottom of the ocean, so they can be there, 33 00:01:53,680 --> 00:01:56,600 Speaker 3: so they'll go there. Why well, because they won't be 34 00:01:56,640 --> 00:01:59,640 Speaker 3: bothered by us there. The thing is, for all their 35 00:01:59,640 --> 00:02:03,960 Speaker 3: advanced technology, they are vulnerable. They can be killed, they 36 00:02:03,960 --> 00:02:06,720 Speaker 3: can't be hurt, and we can do that to them, 37 00:02:07,200 --> 00:02:10,280 Speaker 3: just like you know, you are way smarter than a 38 00:02:10,360 --> 00:02:13,120 Speaker 3: fire ant, but if you step on a fire ant colony, 39 00:02:13,880 --> 00:02:16,120 Speaker 3: too many things from the fire ant can kill you. 40 00:02:16,800 --> 00:02:23,480 Speaker 3: So they know that we, as less, less intelligent creatures 41 00:02:23,520 --> 00:02:26,520 Speaker 3: on the planet en mass, we can actually hurt them 42 00:02:26,600 --> 00:02:30,440 Speaker 3: very badly and that's something that they can't afford. So 43 00:02:30,480 --> 00:02:34,799 Speaker 3: they do hide from us, and rightly so, because there's 44 00:02:34,919 --> 00:02:37,000 Speaker 3: very very few of them, and there's very very many 45 00:02:37,040 --> 00:02:39,920 Speaker 3: of us. So they're doing that i think in their 46 00:02:39,960 --> 00:02:45,400 Speaker 3: oceans because they can't. Their technology affords them that capability mark. 47 00:02:45,440 --> 00:02:49,360 Speaker 2: We've heard stories of navy sailors seeing lights in the 48 00:02:49,400 --> 00:02:52,919 Speaker 2: water as they were standing atop their own ships. 49 00:02:53,000 --> 00:02:57,160 Speaker 3: What do you hear? I hear that story too. I 50 00:02:57,200 --> 00:03:00,880 Speaker 3: mean there was a story. Oh gosh, it was some 51 00:03:01,080 --> 00:03:05,239 Speaker 3: years ago. The Kisikawa Marou, which was a freighter going 52 00:03:05,320 --> 00:03:07,600 Speaker 3: through the Pacific Ocean. It was on its way to 53 00:03:07,680 --> 00:03:10,160 Speaker 3: Japan or on its way out of the Piana, can 54 00:03:10,200 --> 00:03:14,000 Speaker 3: remember which way it was going. But they saw several 55 00:03:14,639 --> 00:03:17,720 Speaker 3: disc shaped craft come out of the ocean and fly 56 00:03:17,840 --> 00:03:21,600 Speaker 3: into the sky. Now that's different from seeing something going 57 00:03:21,639 --> 00:03:24,280 Speaker 3: down into the water. They saw something coming out, So 58 00:03:24,360 --> 00:03:26,440 Speaker 3: you saw a big splash and something coming out of 59 00:03:26,440 --> 00:03:31,440 Speaker 3: the water. Now, when that happened, they in their diligence, 60 00:03:31,560 --> 00:03:36,280 Speaker 3: they logged the latitude and the longitude of that exact 61 00:03:36,360 --> 00:03:40,120 Speaker 3: spot where this happened. And you'll never guess where it was. 62 00:03:41,480 --> 00:03:44,640 Speaker 3: It was at the very end the southern end of 63 00:03:44,720 --> 00:03:49,080 Speaker 3: the Marianas Trench, the deepest spot on the Earth. It's 64 00:03:49,160 --> 00:03:53,840 Speaker 3: where the challenge deep is so that's pretty cool, or 65 00:03:53,920 --> 00:03:57,880 Speaker 3: near the deepest spot, so that's kind of odd that 66 00:03:57,920 --> 00:04:01,520 Speaker 3: it would be at that spot. Again, they can be there, 67 00:04:01,720 --> 00:04:07,280 Speaker 3: there's technology affords them the ability to be there, but 68 00:04:07,280 --> 00:04:09,560 Speaker 3: they're not godlike. We have to understand they are not 69 00:04:09,680 --> 00:04:12,160 Speaker 3: godlike and they may not have our morality. We can't 70 00:04:12,160 --> 00:04:15,640 Speaker 3: design our morality to alien beings. They may be completely 71 00:04:15,640 --> 00:04:18,880 Speaker 3: indifferent to us in the same way that we're indifferent 72 00:04:18,920 --> 00:04:21,479 Speaker 3: to elk when we tranquilize them and tag them with 73 00:04:21,520 --> 00:04:24,359 Speaker 3: a radio collar, you know, from behind our blinds, we 74 00:04:24,440 --> 00:04:27,120 Speaker 3: put up up line. They can't see us, right, we 75 00:04:27,240 --> 00:04:29,960 Speaker 3: tag an elk. Well, they're doing that to us too. 76 00:04:30,800 --> 00:04:33,960 Speaker 3: You know, there's many Americans, many people around the world 77 00:04:34,680 --> 00:04:38,400 Speaker 3: and other countries that have been quote unquote tagged by us, 78 00:04:38,440 --> 00:04:42,200 Speaker 3: supposedly by aliens. For what purpose? Well, why do we 79 00:04:42,240 --> 00:04:45,200 Speaker 3: tag elk? To get their migration patants, to get their habits, 80 00:04:45,279 --> 00:04:49,080 Speaker 3: to learn more about them, And so that might be 81 00:04:49,160 --> 00:04:51,920 Speaker 3: what they're doing to us, because I think they're here 82 00:04:52,160 --> 00:04:57,200 Speaker 3: primarily because they saw oxygen in our atmosphere, which has 83 00:04:57,240 --> 00:05:00,840 Speaker 3: been there for over two and a half billion years. 84 00:05:00,880 --> 00:05:03,840 Speaker 3: And so if they're carbon based beings like we are, 85 00:05:04,560 --> 00:05:06,880 Speaker 3: then they need oxygen to survive, and they know that 86 00:05:06,920 --> 00:05:10,960 Speaker 3: oxygen in an atmosphere means there's life there in all likelihood, 87 00:05:11,000 --> 00:05:15,560 Speaker 3: especially if it doesn't change in it's a mouth. So 88 00:05:15,600 --> 00:05:18,760 Speaker 3: they're looking at that and they're saying, Hey, there's a 89 00:05:18,880 --> 00:05:22,760 Speaker 3: brilliant blue beacon here in the universe. Let's go there. 90 00:05:22,800 --> 00:05:26,000 Speaker 3: There might be life. And so I think we've been 91 00:05:26,040 --> 00:05:28,920 Speaker 3: calling out to the universe for billions of years, and 92 00:05:29,000 --> 00:05:33,680 Speaker 3: so any civilization with the capability will probably have visited 93 00:05:33,800 --> 00:05:35,480 Speaker 3: us at one time in the past or in an 94 00:05:35,520 --> 00:05:39,479 Speaker 3: ongoing manner. Maybe this explained, George, why so many different 95 00:05:39,520 --> 00:05:44,240 Speaker 3: types of alien creatures are described. Also, maybe this is 96 00:05:44,279 --> 00:05:47,520 Speaker 3: why we see so many different types of craft here, 97 00:05:47,800 --> 00:05:53,960 Speaker 3: because it's different species, different alien civilizations that may have 98 00:05:54,000 --> 00:05:57,760 Speaker 3: found us. Again, I wrote a book called The Populated Universe, 99 00:05:58,520 --> 00:06:02,479 Speaker 3: and it talks about life being potentially the rule, not 100 00:06:02,600 --> 00:06:05,400 Speaker 3: the exception in the universe. And I go through the 101 00:06:05,520 --> 00:06:08,400 Speaker 3: arguments as to why I talk about carbon and our 102 00:06:08,440 --> 00:06:12,800 Speaker 3: relationship with carbon, et cetera, and it really points out 103 00:06:12,839 --> 00:06:15,440 Speaker 3: to the fact that the universe may be providing a 104 00:06:15,480 --> 00:06:18,640 Speaker 3: template for life and we took advantage of it because 105 00:06:18,640 --> 00:06:20,640 Speaker 3: we had an Earth. There wasn't that right position around 106 00:06:20,680 --> 00:06:23,640 Speaker 3: its star, and there's many planets around other stars that 107 00:06:23,680 --> 00:06:25,640 Speaker 3: are in the right position around their stars. 108 00:06:26,440 --> 00:06:31,919 Speaker 2: That's a good point. How many USO events have then reported, Oh. 109 00:06:31,800 --> 00:06:35,200 Speaker 3: There have been hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of USO events, 110 00:06:36,360 --> 00:06:39,240 Speaker 3: and even more if you count people seeing them from 111 00:06:39,320 --> 00:06:42,320 Speaker 3: the surface and seeing a light under the water. Now, 112 00:06:42,320 --> 00:06:43,880 Speaker 3: when they see a light under the water, we have 113 00:06:43,960 --> 00:06:49,280 Speaker 3: to be careful because there are some bioluminescent algae that 114 00:06:49,720 --> 00:06:55,440 Speaker 3: people have mistaken for an underwater base underwater UFO just 115 00:06:55,440 --> 00:07:00,560 Speaker 3: sitting there kind of a thing. But by and large, 116 00:07:00,680 --> 00:07:05,560 Speaker 3: there are other there are other sightings like, for instance, 117 00:07:06,800 --> 00:07:11,520 Speaker 3: navies around the world, Okay, they have seen things zipping 118 00:07:11,560 --> 00:07:14,600 Speaker 3: through their sonars at very very high rates of speed. 119 00:07:15,200 --> 00:07:19,560 Speaker 3: Our US Navy has seen that. I've worked for the 120 00:07:19,640 --> 00:07:24,440 Speaker 3: Navy for decades as a model maker and doing special 121 00:07:24,480 --> 00:07:27,760 Speaker 3: programs for them, and one of the things I saw 122 00:07:27,920 --> 00:07:32,640 Speaker 3: on a cruise on a sub was I didn't see 123 00:07:32,680 --> 00:07:36,000 Speaker 3: what they did was something coming through the sonar at 124 00:07:36,040 --> 00:07:38,280 Speaker 3: several hundred knots, which is several hundred miles an hour. 125 00:07:39,400 --> 00:07:41,880 Speaker 3: And a few years later I did a job for 126 00:07:41,920 --> 00:07:45,040 Speaker 3: the Joint Chiefs and I was a presidential briefing model. 127 00:07:45,600 --> 00:07:49,440 Speaker 3: And when I brought it down to Washington, I asked 128 00:07:49,480 --> 00:07:51,160 Speaker 3: one of the chiefs, I said, well, can you tell 129 00:07:51,160 --> 00:07:54,560 Speaker 3: me about this program? And he basically said, I can't 130 00:07:54,600 --> 00:07:57,920 Speaker 3: talk about that program, sorry, in other words, admitting it exists, 131 00:07:59,040 --> 00:08:01,400 Speaker 3: but not being to give me any details. So he 132 00:08:01,480 --> 00:08:03,880 Speaker 3: said a whole lot, I sing, very little, see what 133 00:08:03,880 --> 00:08:07,320 Speaker 3: I mean. That was cool. So now we know that 134 00:08:07,880 --> 00:08:10,960 Speaker 3: not just our navy is seeing these, other navies are 135 00:08:11,000 --> 00:08:13,320 Speaker 3: seeing these. Two of the Russians have seen them. Other 136 00:08:13,400 --> 00:08:18,520 Speaker 3: navies have seen them and reported them, and some are 137 00:08:18,520 --> 00:08:21,680 Speaker 3: more pragmatic about it. We have a rule, though, and 138 00:08:21,920 --> 00:08:24,320 Speaker 3: the rule in our in our navy seems to be 139 00:08:25,920 --> 00:08:30,560 Speaker 3: observe and report, do not engage. And that seems to 140 00:08:30,600 --> 00:08:34,400 Speaker 3: be the rule. And that's why on the boat I 141 00:08:34,480 --> 00:08:36,040 Speaker 3: was on, when when they know, you know, it was 142 00:08:36,080 --> 00:08:39,040 Speaker 3: just a visitor on the boat for for a cruise, 143 00:08:40,080 --> 00:08:43,800 Speaker 3: not a sailor. I got see sick. No, I'm not proud. 144 00:08:44,320 --> 00:08:46,559 Speaker 3: When the boat was on the surface, Georgia rock and rolls, 145 00:08:46,559 --> 00:08:48,840 Speaker 3: but when you get underwater, it feels like everybody listening 146 00:08:48,840 --> 00:08:55,160 Speaker 3: to the show is right now they can't tell their movement. Yes, yes, 147 00:08:55,200 --> 00:08:59,080 Speaker 3: there was a cruise on a submarine, and I guess 148 00:08:59,200 --> 00:09:02,160 Speaker 3: it was in the north of Okay. So the thing was, 149 00:09:03,040 --> 00:09:06,600 Speaker 3: when when the boat is underwater, it feels rock steady. 150 00:09:07,200 --> 00:09:11,120 Speaker 3: So anything that is caught on sonar becomes, of course, 151 00:09:11,240 --> 00:09:14,400 Speaker 3: of high importance. And the sonar guy is supposed to 152 00:09:14,400 --> 00:09:18,040 Speaker 3: be able to classify everything he sees, you know, and 153 00:09:18,400 --> 00:09:22,440 Speaker 3: when this came through the sonar, he quite literally didn't 154 00:09:22,480 --> 00:09:25,400 Speaker 3: know how to classify it. And when the executive officer 155 00:09:25,640 --> 00:09:27,120 Speaker 3: asked him for the bearing and the range, you can 156 00:09:27,160 --> 00:09:29,880 Speaker 3: give that you know the angle of off the boat 157 00:09:29,880 --> 00:09:32,480 Speaker 3: and how far away it is. But when he asked 158 00:09:32,480 --> 00:09:36,080 Speaker 3: for the speed, the kid on the sonar put his 159 00:09:36,200 --> 00:09:38,480 Speaker 3: arms out to his side with a worried look on 160 00:09:38,559 --> 00:09:40,880 Speaker 3: his face, and turned to the XO and said several 161 00:09:40,960 --> 00:09:44,160 Speaker 3: hundred knots sir. And he kept his hands there like 162 00:09:44,200 --> 00:09:47,439 Speaker 3: he was frozen. And the x the executive officer, without 163 00:09:47,440 --> 00:09:49,560 Speaker 3: missing a beat, said okay, log it and dog it, 164 00:09:49,840 --> 00:09:51,920 Speaker 3: and the kid put his hands back onto the console 165 00:09:52,000 --> 00:09:55,760 Speaker 3: said sir, yes, sir. He went back to work. So 166 00:09:56,160 --> 00:09:58,079 Speaker 3: I got up because you know, George, I was this 167 00:09:58,160 --> 00:09:59,920 Speaker 3: big shot on the boat, right, I was invited to 168 00:10:00,120 --> 00:10:02,200 Speaker 3: on the boat and I guess you probably see where 169 00:10:02,200 --> 00:10:04,960 Speaker 3: this is going. And I said that. He x, oh, sir, 170 00:10:05,120 --> 00:10:07,360 Speaker 3: I'm familiar with these. They call them a fast mover. 171 00:10:07,520 --> 00:10:09,520 Speaker 3: I'm familiar with these fast movers. Is there something I 172 00:10:09,520 --> 00:10:12,920 Speaker 3: can help you with? He says D'Antonio. Right, sorry, yes, sir, 173 00:10:12,960 --> 00:10:15,199 Speaker 3: you having a good time? Sorry, yes, sir, let's keep 174 00:10:15,240 --> 00:10:19,280 Speaker 3: it that way, and he walked away. Okay, so he 175 00:10:19,360 --> 00:10:21,920 Speaker 3: put me in my place and that was it. But 176 00:10:23,679 --> 00:10:27,720 Speaker 3: it turns out that we have we've seen them. It's 177 00:10:28,120 --> 00:10:31,960 Speaker 3: it's not a common occurrence, it's a somewhat rare occurrence, 178 00:10:32,360 --> 00:10:34,560 Speaker 3: but they are seen and they don't know what to 179 00:10:34,600 --> 00:10:37,480 Speaker 3: do with them. So it's observant report, do not engage. 180 00:10:38,080 --> 00:10:40,439 Speaker 2: What was the USS Hampton. 181 00:10:40,080 --> 00:10:44,840 Speaker 3: Event, Well, see my friend Bob McGuire and he's in 182 00:10:44,920 --> 00:10:47,880 Speaker 3: our sky through livestream Chace alot and he's known as 183 00:10:47,920 --> 00:10:51,520 Speaker 3: signs Bob. But he was on the USS Hampton and 184 00:10:52,080 --> 00:10:54,960 Speaker 3: he actually was on the boat again, not as a 185 00:10:55,000 --> 00:10:57,319 Speaker 3: sailor but again as a visitor in the boat doing 186 00:10:57,360 --> 00:11:01,840 Speaker 3: a project. And they had uso blow by the boat. 187 00:11:02,160 --> 00:11:05,319 Speaker 3: It was very close on the boat I was on. 188 00:11:05,880 --> 00:11:08,199 Speaker 3: It was a distant object that was making a very 189 00:11:08,200 --> 00:11:11,520 Speaker 3: faint trace on the sonar for a period of time. 190 00:11:12,000 --> 00:11:15,280 Speaker 3: But on his boat, it blew by the boat very 191 00:11:15,400 --> 00:11:18,720 Speaker 3: very quickly, and it actually shook everybody in the boat. 192 00:11:18,960 --> 00:11:21,440 Speaker 3: He said, it shook the boat as it went by 193 00:11:21,600 --> 00:11:26,599 Speaker 3: so close, and they determined it was moving hundreds of 194 00:11:26,679 --> 00:11:29,080 Speaker 3: knots one hundreds of miles an hour underwater right by 195 00:11:29,120 --> 00:11:33,080 Speaker 3: the boat, and it literally shook, like I said, it 196 00:11:33,080 --> 00:11:37,840 Speaker 3: shook the entire boat. And that's something that you know, 197 00:11:38,320 --> 00:11:42,680 Speaker 3: Bob has just recently started talking about. So you know 198 00:11:42,760 --> 00:11:47,600 Speaker 3: the concept of UFOs in the sky, usos underwater. You know, 199 00:11:47,840 --> 00:11:52,320 Speaker 3: if there's civilization's here, it means that they have worked 200 00:11:52,320 --> 00:11:57,160 Speaker 3: out way to master pressure, whether it's zero pressure on 201 00:11:57,280 --> 00:12:00,680 Speaker 3: space or high pressure underwater. And I think they do 202 00:12:00,760 --> 00:12:06,080 Speaker 3: it by interdimensional travel, and that interdimensionality allows them to 203 00:12:07,160 --> 00:12:10,400 Speaker 3: neither be here nor there, and so they aren't really 204 00:12:10,400 --> 00:12:13,680 Speaker 3: feeling the forces of the water when they're here because 205 00:12:13,679 --> 00:12:17,680 Speaker 3: they're not here long enough. It's a very very small 206 00:12:17,720 --> 00:12:21,600 Speaker 3: fraction of time, you know, far less time than it 207 00:12:21,640 --> 00:12:25,320 Speaker 3: took for the Titan to collapse, for instance, the submarine Titan. 208 00:12:26,720 --> 00:12:33,559 Speaker 3: So there's a lot of potential for this methodology of travel. 209 00:12:34,640 --> 00:12:37,280 Speaker 3: You know, even Avi Lode came out and said recently 210 00:12:37,320 --> 00:12:41,200 Speaker 3: that he thinks maybe alien craft are traveling into dimensionally. Now, 211 00:12:41,960 --> 00:12:44,040 Speaker 3: I've been saying it for years, you know, because my 212 00:12:44,080 --> 00:12:46,760 Speaker 3: friend Bob Schroeder, who wrote the book Solving the UFO Enigma, 213 00:12:47,400 --> 00:12:51,120 Speaker 3: you know, he's he's dead on right. He's absolutely accurate, 214 00:12:51,760 --> 00:12:56,800 Speaker 3: you know, and so he's I took his work. I 215 00:12:56,840 --> 00:12:59,559 Speaker 3: read his book. Was kind of tough to get through 216 00:12:59,559 --> 00:13:03,200 Speaker 3: because equations, a lot of maths, but when you do, 217 00:13:03,240 --> 00:13:06,880 Speaker 3: you realize this is just an incredible revelation. So I 218 00:13:07,000 --> 00:13:09,360 Speaker 3: seized on it and I started doing my work on it, 219 00:13:09,400 --> 00:13:13,880 Speaker 3: and I've found it. It's very likely that this is 220 00:13:13,880 --> 00:13:17,080 Speaker 3: how they're doing it. They could travel from here to 221 00:13:17,080 --> 00:13:19,199 Speaker 3: Alpha Centauri in a very very short amount of time 222 00:13:19,320 --> 00:13:23,920 Speaker 3: using this technique Alpacatory being the closest star system to 223 00:13:24,000 --> 00:13:27,680 Speaker 3: us other than our son, and they could go to 224 00:13:27,720 --> 00:13:30,280 Speaker 3: Pluto in minutes rather than the ten years it took 225 00:13:30,360 --> 00:13:35,880 Speaker 3: us using this technique. So there's a lot of interesting 226 00:13:36,000 --> 00:13:39,400 Speaker 3: physics that we don't know yet, but we're working on it. 227 00:13:39,760 --> 00:13:40,640 Speaker 3: We're working on it. 228 00:13:41,280 --> 00:13:43,440 Speaker 2: Tell us about the shag Harbor event. 229 00:13:44,880 --> 00:13:47,040 Speaker 3: Shag Harbor. I'm going to be speaking there next year. 230 00:13:47,120 --> 00:13:51,640 Speaker 3: Shag Harbor interesting event. There was this object that came 231 00:13:51,679 --> 00:13:54,720 Speaker 3: down in the water in Shag Harbor and no one 232 00:13:54,880 --> 00:13:57,880 Speaker 3: knows quite what it was. They couldn't find anything on 233 00:13:57,920 --> 00:14:03,040 Speaker 3: the ocean floor, but many, many hundreds of people saw 234 00:14:03,040 --> 00:14:07,439 Speaker 3: it come down in the in Shag Harbor and they 235 00:14:07,480 --> 00:14:09,640 Speaker 3: don't know what it was that came down in the water. 236 00:14:10,200 --> 00:14:14,880 Speaker 3: And that sparked the asserts. That sparked an entire culture 237 00:14:15,600 --> 00:14:19,760 Speaker 3: around the Shag Harbor in Nova Scotia, and that was 238 00:14:19,960 --> 00:14:24,600 Speaker 3: really cool. So Shag Harbor is you know, it's actually 239 00:14:24,680 --> 00:14:29,640 Speaker 3: sort of like a quintessential USO case, right, And so's 240 00:14:29,760 --> 00:14:34,280 Speaker 3: there's a lot of cases like this, right. So there 241 00:14:34,320 --> 00:14:36,400 Speaker 3: was another one in the US Navy was doing war 242 00:14:36,440 --> 00:14:39,680 Speaker 3: games off Puerto Rico, and they had five submarines in 243 00:14:39,720 --> 00:14:44,440 Speaker 3: this war group, the sub Warrior war Convoy, and one 244 00:14:44,480 --> 00:14:49,400 Speaker 3: of them caught a sonar trace of a USO and 245 00:14:49,440 --> 00:14:52,240 Speaker 3: it started to give chase because they weren't quite sure 246 00:14:52,240 --> 00:14:55,480 Speaker 3: if it was a test for them by our people 247 00:14:55,520 --> 00:14:59,480 Speaker 3: who not. They chased it for two days and they 248 00:14:59,560 --> 00:15:02,760 Speaker 3: found it's an official part. It says it went the 249 00:15:02,800 --> 00:15:05,680 Speaker 3: full depth of the ocean in seconds and up to 250 00:15:05,720 --> 00:15:08,960 Speaker 3: the surface, down to the bottom and toy to them, 251 00:15:09,000 --> 00:15:10,880 Speaker 3: allowed them to get closer, and then took off at 252 00:15:10,960 --> 00:15:14,000 Speaker 3: hundreds of miles an hour. See it's similar, isn't it 253 00:15:14,040 --> 00:15:17,280 Speaker 3: similar to what's being reported? So they've been here for 254 00:15:17,320 --> 00:15:20,120 Speaker 3: a while, George, you know, and shagg Harber's is one 255 00:15:20,120 --> 00:15:22,760 Speaker 3: of the events of many that have happened. 256 00:15:24,000 --> 00:15:25,480 Speaker 2: It's dramatic, though, isn't it. 257 00:15:25,640 --> 00:15:29,280 Speaker 3: Mark, Oh, it is it is, you know. And it's 258 00:15:29,400 --> 00:15:32,440 Speaker 3: it's a puzzle, And boy, I love puzzles. I know 259 00:15:32,520 --> 00:15:34,440 Speaker 3: you do too, well, we sure do. 260 00:15:34,880 --> 00:15:38,160 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 261 00:15:38,160 --> 00:15:41,120 Speaker 1: one a m. Eastern and go to Coast to coastam 262 00:15:41,160 --> 00:15:42,240 Speaker 1: dot com for more