1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:03,480 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on 2 00:00:03,600 --> 00:00:06,920 Speaker 1: iHeart Radio and welcome back George Nor with you along 3 00:00:06,920 --> 00:00:10,399 Speaker 1: with Stephen Quayle as we talk about the possibility of 4 00:00:11,000 --> 00:00:15,720 Speaker 1: earthquake and volcano eruptions. A couple geologists are thanking you 5 00:00:15,880 --> 00:00:19,520 Speaker 1: for bringing the Cascadia story to the forefront, Steve Well, 6 00:00:19,560 --> 00:00:22,000 Speaker 1: one of the most frustrating things. And by the way, 7 00:00:22,040 --> 00:00:25,560 Speaker 1: I'm I'm the son of a geologist. My grandfather was 8 00:00:25,600 --> 00:00:28,880 Speaker 1: a geologist, so you know, it's it's kind of a 9 00:00:28,880 --> 00:00:33,240 Speaker 1: funny story. But anyway that and thank you guys. I 10 00:00:33,280 --> 00:00:38,360 Speaker 1: think people need to recognize a contribution that geologists make. 11 00:00:38,440 --> 00:00:40,040 Speaker 1: And you know, I don't know if the guys that 12 00:00:40,080 --> 00:00:42,600 Speaker 1: are are thanking you for having me on or me 13 00:00:42,720 --> 00:00:45,199 Speaker 1: being on whatever. But the thing is is that there 14 00:00:45,200 --> 00:00:47,920 Speaker 1: are a lot of people that want to tell the 15 00:00:48,000 --> 00:00:53,640 Speaker 1: American people what's really going on. Unfortunately, you know, our country, 16 00:00:53,880 --> 00:00:56,400 Speaker 1: in my opinion, has such an ursion to that these 17 00:00:56,480 --> 00:00:59,000 Speaker 1: kind of truths that people are being kept in the dark. 18 00:00:59,040 --> 00:01:03,840 Speaker 1: Now listen, very smart people like for instance, there's a 19 00:01:03,880 --> 00:01:08,320 Speaker 1: gentleman named his last name is Goldfinger. What a great name. Yeah, 20 00:01:08,319 --> 00:01:10,000 Speaker 1: I do too. And then you know, one of my 21 00:01:10,040 --> 00:01:12,839 Speaker 1: favorite shows. But the point is is that he made 22 00:01:12,880 --> 00:01:17,600 Speaker 1: the statement that should Casscadia go into our experience a 23 00:01:17,600 --> 00:01:21,760 Speaker 1: full margin rupture, that we're talking everything west, even our 24 00:01:21,800 --> 00:01:26,039 Speaker 1: state five basically is gone. And because of the way 25 00:01:26,120 --> 00:01:30,360 Speaker 1: the West coast is, specially Oregon and Washington and even 26 00:01:30,400 --> 00:01:35,000 Speaker 1: northern California, the way that the cities are built very 27 00:01:35,040 --> 00:01:38,760 Speaker 1: close to the ocean. And what's unfortunate is is that 28 00:01:39,000 --> 00:01:42,360 Speaker 1: even with it, let's say a five minute warning, you know, 29 00:01:42,480 --> 00:01:45,320 Speaker 1: it's tough to move that many people. So my goal, 30 00:01:45,440 --> 00:01:48,720 Speaker 1: George in this Cascadia film, I want to make it blunt, 31 00:01:48,840 --> 00:01:53,160 Speaker 1: is to save lives. And I know how frustrating it is. 32 00:01:53,320 --> 00:01:57,400 Speaker 1: God blessed the geologists that basically are doing their best 33 00:01:57,480 --> 00:01:59,880 Speaker 1: to come up with a warning system. And there are 34 00:02:00,040 --> 00:02:05,040 Speaker 1: some smart people. For instance, Bernard Shuai of the USGS 35 00:02:05,240 --> 00:02:08,800 Speaker 1: was the guy that really figured out how harmonic tremors 36 00:02:09,919 --> 00:02:15,720 Speaker 1: were indicative of pending volcanic eruptions for instance like Mount Pinatubo. 37 00:02:16,200 --> 00:02:20,400 Speaker 1: And so there's some amazing work going on. And then 38 00:02:20,680 --> 00:02:24,640 Speaker 1: what's problematic is that because the planet now seems to 39 00:02:24,680 --> 00:02:29,760 Speaker 1: have seriously it's got multiple motions of multiple plates and 40 00:02:30,280 --> 00:02:34,000 Speaker 1: pressures building up all over that it demands that some 41 00:02:34,080 --> 00:02:37,120 Speaker 1: of this pressure be released. So the thing that is 42 00:02:37,240 --> 00:02:41,360 Speaker 1: critical is the amount of people that that could effect 43 00:02:41,520 --> 00:02:45,200 Speaker 1: in meaning a full margin rupture on the Cascadia fault line. 44 00:02:45,200 --> 00:02:49,720 Speaker 1: And what's important is this, it's not just the c 45 00:02:50,040 --> 00:02:53,280 Speaker 1: and obviously the tidal situation that would happen, you know, 46 00:02:53,919 --> 00:02:56,799 Speaker 1: during a full margin rupture, but it's also off of 47 00:02:56,840 --> 00:03:02,120 Speaker 1: the coast there are axial seamounts which are basically underwater volcanos, 48 00:03:02,280 --> 00:03:07,240 Speaker 1: and interestingly enough that not only they're underwater volcanos off 49 00:03:07,240 --> 00:03:09,480 Speaker 1: of our west coast, but now there are also some 50 00:03:09,600 --> 00:03:14,320 Speaker 1: problematic issues off the east coast, and nobody ever considers that. Obviously, 51 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:16,400 Speaker 1: we're watching in Puerto Rico, I think just in the 52 00:03:16,480 --> 00:03:20,919 Speaker 1: last day there's been close to sixty eight earthquakes, and 53 00:03:21,280 --> 00:03:25,920 Speaker 1: Puerto Ricos sits on the deepest trough, the Puerto Rican Trench, 54 00:03:26,320 --> 00:03:28,520 Speaker 1: that's right at twenty seven thousand feet. It is the 55 00:03:28,560 --> 00:03:33,240 Speaker 1: deepest area in the Atlantic versus a Mariana I'm sorry, 56 00:03:33,320 --> 00:03:36,640 Speaker 1: versus a Mariana Trench in the Pacific. And then you've 57 00:03:36,680 --> 00:03:39,760 Speaker 1: got the Cayman Trough, which is about twenty five thousand 58 00:03:39,840 --> 00:03:42,960 Speaker 1: feet and deep and so what's happening. Puerto Rico's getting 59 00:03:43,000 --> 00:03:48,240 Speaker 1: squeezed and also Puerto Rico is literally having real problems. 60 00:03:48,320 --> 00:03:52,920 Speaker 1: And again what I would call how do I say 61 00:03:52,960 --> 00:03:56,200 Speaker 1: this building towards the release, and the release is going 62 00:03:56,200 --> 00:04:00,600 Speaker 1: to be very problematic. So when these four verses going 63 00:04:00,600 --> 00:04:04,400 Speaker 1: on all the world, and let's take Indonesia, it's not 64 00:04:04,520 --> 00:04:07,600 Speaker 1: just anymore. I remember when I started on talk radio 65 00:04:07,720 --> 00:04:11,200 Speaker 1: twenty five years ago, both as a host and as 66 00:04:11,240 --> 00:04:13,840 Speaker 1: a guest, there were maybe, you know, maybe a half 67 00:04:13,840 --> 00:04:17,640 Speaker 1: a dozen eruptions. But now we're seeing the major eruptions 68 00:04:17,720 --> 00:04:21,640 Speaker 1: concurrently all over the planet. For instance, to come Choka Peninsula. 69 00:04:21,680 --> 00:04:25,240 Speaker 1: Are they all connected to Stephen, Well, they're not all 70 00:04:25,839 --> 00:04:28,839 Speaker 1: Some people say they're all connected. Obviously, go into the 71 00:04:28,880 --> 00:04:31,599 Speaker 1: Earth's mantle and you know core they're all connected. But 72 00:04:31,640 --> 00:04:34,480 Speaker 1: the point is is that the magma pools, for instance, 73 00:04:34,560 --> 00:04:36,680 Speaker 1: that are on the West coast United States, go up 74 00:04:36,680 --> 00:04:39,520 Speaker 1: into Alaska. And I want to make something clear of 75 00:04:39,520 --> 00:04:42,719 Speaker 1: the fifty seven hundred NASSA flights, and by the way, 76 00:04:42,720 --> 00:04:45,080 Speaker 1: those are how do we know those numbers? Are people 77 00:04:45,120 --> 00:04:48,839 Speaker 1: that monitor the actual tail numbers on flight Tracker, which 78 00:04:48,839 --> 00:04:52,520 Speaker 1: every aircraft that flies have to file a flight plant 79 00:04:52,600 --> 00:04:56,040 Speaker 1: with the exception of the intelligence agencies. But you know, 80 00:04:56,160 --> 00:04:58,479 Speaker 1: just to put it in perspective, I believe there's only 81 00:04:58,520 --> 00:05:01,400 Speaker 1: been one or two flights over Llowstone, one of the 82 00:05:01,480 --> 00:05:05,600 Speaker 1: areas that's west of me and Boza, Montana. Obviously, Yellowstone 83 00:05:05,640 --> 00:05:10,120 Speaker 1: Park is the area around the craters of the Moon. 84 00:05:10,200 --> 00:05:13,440 Speaker 1: The craters of the Moon is literally which like you're 85 00:05:13,480 --> 00:05:15,640 Speaker 1: on the moon. And that was the last place in 86 00:05:15,680 --> 00:05:18,680 Speaker 1: the summer, late fall that I excuse me, late fall 87 00:05:18,720 --> 00:05:21,480 Speaker 1: that I was in a helicopter doing aerial photography over 88 00:05:21,920 --> 00:05:24,960 Speaker 1: the Department of Energy, which pretty much has control over 89 00:05:25,000 --> 00:05:30,520 Speaker 1: that whole area, doesn't share their geologic information with other departments. 90 00:05:30,520 --> 00:05:35,000 Speaker 1: And here's what's happening. In the world of intelligence or 91 00:05:35,120 --> 00:05:40,000 Speaker 1: lack there of. Everything is compartmentalized, so everyone wants their turf. 92 00:05:40,480 --> 00:05:45,080 Speaker 1: So with intelligence information listen, information is power, So they 93 00:05:45,120 --> 00:05:48,840 Speaker 1: that control the information the outflow of that information can 94 00:05:48,920 --> 00:05:52,560 Speaker 1: pretty much, you know, determine what people are given access 95 00:05:52,600 --> 00:05:55,560 Speaker 1: to and they barter it. Georgia's just like, seriously, it's 96 00:05:55,560 --> 00:05:57,760 Speaker 1: just like a game of poker. I'm told by those 97 00:05:57,800 --> 00:05:59,960 Speaker 1: in that world or the record, I have never been 98 00:06:00,080 --> 00:06:03,120 Speaker 1: an employment in the employee of the federal government, never 99 00:06:03,160 --> 00:06:07,520 Speaker 1: been a CIA agent, never been anything, and accept a researcher, 100 00:06:07,760 --> 00:06:11,720 Speaker 1: you know, and an author and a filmmaker. So what 101 00:06:11,839 --> 00:06:14,760 Speaker 1: I like to do is talk to the smartest people 102 00:06:15,240 --> 00:06:18,119 Speaker 1: that are out there and they will tell you. See, 103 00:06:18,360 --> 00:06:21,080 Speaker 1: people can tell you what's going on, but what's going on, 104 00:06:21,720 --> 00:06:25,800 Speaker 1: you know, isn't going to just automatically appear. So this 105 00:06:25,880 --> 00:06:29,480 Speaker 1: is why it's critical that people understand the Cascadia region 106 00:06:29,800 --> 00:06:33,320 Speaker 1: is the issue. Yellowstone is a diversion and one of 107 00:06:33,360 --> 00:06:36,400 Speaker 1: the most amazing things that and I haven't broken this 108 00:06:36,520 --> 00:06:40,680 Speaker 1: on anybody's show. I always think it's very cool because 109 00:06:40,760 --> 00:06:43,600 Speaker 1: again we've all had the we've heard the legends of 110 00:06:43,720 --> 00:06:49,720 Speaker 1: Lemuria and Mew James Churchwood, and we've heard oh goodnight Atlantis, 111 00:06:50,080 --> 00:06:52,720 Speaker 1: and we've heard what they call pseudo archaeology. But one 112 00:06:52,760 --> 00:06:55,159 Speaker 1: of the most interesting things I've found out and I 113 00:06:55,240 --> 00:06:57,640 Speaker 1: sent it to lex and and thank you. We've got 114 00:06:57,640 --> 00:07:01,080 Speaker 1: it posted. Yeah, you've got it posted. I just had 115 00:07:01,120 --> 00:07:03,520 Speaker 1: this feeling because you know, I'm doing a lot of 116 00:07:03,520 --> 00:07:06,279 Speaker 1: stuff on Mars. I'm not there and i haven't sent 117 00:07:06,480 --> 00:07:09,359 Speaker 1: my cars there, but by that I'm talking about the 118 00:07:09,440 --> 00:07:14,280 Speaker 1: ancient history of Mars is so fascinating because there's a 119 00:07:14,320 --> 00:07:18,240 Speaker 1: reason why every civilization on the Earth looks to the stars. 120 00:07:18,240 --> 00:07:23,120 Speaker 1: There's there's a reason why cosmic events and everything was 121 00:07:23,200 --> 00:07:27,480 Speaker 1: so problematic to everybody. But Mars is the most interesting 122 00:07:27,560 --> 00:07:32,320 Speaker 1: because on the sea floor, in the base, pretty much 123 00:07:32,360 --> 00:07:35,200 Speaker 1: in the Pacific Ocean, is a place called You're gonna 124 00:07:35,240 --> 00:07:41,679 Speaker 1: love this Tamu Tamu masi massif meaning massive, and Tamu 125 00:07:41,840 --> 00:07:46,360 Speaker 1: standing for Texas A ANDM University who actually discovered the 126 00:07:46,680 --> 00:07:50,880 Speaker 1: massive volcanic plateau. And people argue, but it's the largest 127 00:07:50,960 --> 00:07:54,920 Speaker 1: volcano on Earth, and now Monakaya claims that, but by 128 00:07:55,160 --> 00:07:58,800 Speaker 1: surface area, it's the largest. Now listen to this. I 129 00:07:58,840 --> 00:08:01,160 Speaker 1: took a look at it. Something stood out at me. 130 00:08:01,240 --> 00:08:04,240 Speaker 1: I posted it and one of my listeners spotted the 131 00:08:04,280 --> 00:08:07,280 Speaker 1: face on it. I missed it, and when I looked 132 00:08:07,280 --> 00:08:10,880 Speaker 1: at the face, I got ahold of a bright, bright physicist, 133 00:08:10,960 --> 00:08:14,160 Speaker 1: I mean really bright and out of country. And I said, 134 00:08:14,200 --> 00:08:17,560 Speaker 1: could you do me a favor? Will you superimpose the 135 00:08:17,960 --> 00:08:22,880 Speaker 1: Tamum Plateau over the Olympus Mons Plateau. Now the Olympus 136 00:08:22,920 --> 00:08:26,200 Speaker 1: Mons Plateau is on Mars. Okay, okay, And then I'm 137 00:08:26,200 --> 00:08:29,440 Speaker 1: trying to sync up and link up the faces on Mars. Okay, 138 00:08:29,480 --> 00:08:31,880 Speaker 1: so when people go to Coast Coast am site you'll 139 00:08:31,920 --> 00:08:34,480 Speaker 1: see this. And by the way, it's not on my side, 140 00:08:34,480 --> 00:08:39,480 Speaker 1: it's on coast site. So here is the working hypothesis 141 00:08:39,520 --> 00:08:44,520 Speaker 1: I'm working on the planet. Mars and Earth used to 142 00:08:44,559 --> 00:08:47,880 Speaker 1: be much closer together than they are now. There are 143 00:08:47,960 --> 00:08:52,040 Speaker 1: even I mean, Velakovski was mocked, you know, as being 144 00:08:52,040 --> 00:08:56,640 Speaker 1: a pseudoscientist, until everything that we did after Velakovski's death 145 00:08:56,840 --> 00:09:00,360 Speaker 1: proved that basically he wasn't a pseudoscientist. He was as 146 00:09:00,679 --> 00:09:04,160 Speaker 1: he claims. Venus is a captured comment. You got it. 147 00:09:04,480 --> 00:09:07,360 Speaker 1: And that's, by the way, the whole And we're having 148 00:09:07,440 --> 00:09:11,840 Speaker 1: Branson this year. That's going to be dealing with cataclysms 149 00:09:11,880 --> 00:09:14,560 Speaker 1: and the coming Earth changes, and it's going to be 150 00:09:14,600 --> 00:09:17,440 Speaker 1: pretty interesting. George. We've already got i think sixty percent 151 00:09:17,520 --> 00:09:20,280 Speaker 1: sold out and Branson you can go and see the 152 00:09:20,320 --> 00:09:23,040 Speaker 1: whole story on it. But it's about cataclysms and it's 153 00:09:23,040 --> 00:09:29,479 Speaker 1: about astral catastrophism. A lot of the standard geologic timetable 154 00:09:29,640 --> 00:09:34,680 Speaker 1: information is based on natural processes taking place over filling 155 00:09:34,720 --> 00:09:38,240 Speaker 1: the blank billions and billions of years. But when you 156 00:09:38,280 --> 00:09:41,240 Speaker 1: start dealing with planetary physics, and you start dealing with 157 00:09:41,400 --> 00:09:47,040 Speaker 1: plasma physics, the exchanges between There's even a law called 158 00:09:47,120 --> 00:09:50,760 Speaker 1: Rosia's limit. When planets come too close together, the greater 159 00:09:50,920 --> 00:09:54,320 Speaker 1: mass of the more planetary of the mass of the 160 00:09:54,360 --> 00:09:57,160 Speaker 1: greater planet will destroy the lesser planet. So that's why 161 00:09:57,160 --> 00:10:00,920 Speaker 1: there's an asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. And the 162 00:10:00,920 --> 00:10:03,800 Speaker 1: thing is is that what I'm saying is this is 163 00:10:03,920 --> 00:10:07,000 Speaker 1: just because someone's ahead of the time doesn't mean they're 164 00:10:07,000 --> 00:10:09,920 Speaker 1: wrong at that time. And we're seeing everything and a 165 00:10:09,960 --> 00:10:13,200 Speaker 1: lot of things that are changing because our knowledge base 166 00:10:13,320 --> 00:10:18,400 Speaker 1: is increasing. So getting back to Tamu, Masus m assif, 167 00:10:18,600 --> 00:10:24,160 Speaker 1: isn't it interesting Texas A and M University, but mut 168 00:10:24,360 --> 00:10:28,080 Speaker 1: A and M University goes right back to new Somebody said, well, 169 00:10:28,080 --> 00:10:31,640 Speaker 1: that's just coincidence that just you're really stretching itsy. Now 170 00:10:32,160 --> 00:10:34,640 Speaker 1: I'm saying this, what are the chances that I can 171 00:10:34,720 --> 00:10:38,360 Speaker 1: take the largest volcanic play, give or take the argument 172 00:10:38,400 --> 00:10:42,080 Speaker 1: that maybe Monake and Monkeea may be bigger from you know, 173 00:10:42,200 --> 00:10:45,319 Speaker 1: elevation wise, from the sea floor. But when you do 174 00:10:45,360 --> 00:10:48,640 Speaker 1: that and you put it over on you know again, 175 00:10:48,760 --> 00:10:52,640 Speaker 1: Olympus mons A plateau and the faces on the face 176 00:10:52,800 --> 00:10:56,320 Speaker 1: singular on Mars, the face singular on Tamu Massi, and 177 00:10:56,440 --> 00:11:00,560 Speaker 1: also there's a face on Cuba under water. And what 178 00:11:00,600 --> 00:11:06,000 Speaker 1: I'm telling everybody is this, the great ancient civilizations of 179 00:11:06,160 --> 00:11:12,400 Speaker 1: history were judged in a planetary cataclysm and that thanked 180 00:11:12,400 --> 00:11:16,199 Speaker 1: them beneath the waves, not over an extended amount of time, 181 00:11:16,679 --> 00:11:21,720 Speaker 1: but over pretty much an instantaneous act of massive title 182 00:11:21,800 --> 00:11:25,240 Speaker 1: surge planetary discharge. Now people say, well, you can't prove that, well, 183 00:11:25,280 --> 00:11:29,840 Speaker 1: I'm doing h Yeah, it was devastating and so and 184 00:11:29,960 --> 00:11:32,480 Speaker 1: here's another thing that'll flip people out. I always love 185 00:11:32,520 --> 00:11:35,880 Speaker 1: this stuff because you will open it up for questions. 186 00:11:35,920 --> 00:11:39,400 Speaker 1: But I'm on record as stating that with the different 187 00:11:39,480 --> 00:11:45,959 Speaker 1: forms of earthquakes and subduction plate movement, both overthrust and subduction, 188 00:11:46,200 --> 00:11:48,520 Speaker 1: that we're going to see a lot of the ancient 189 00:11:48,600 --> 00:11:53,000 Speaker 1: civilizations that sank beneath the sea rising out of the sea. 190 00:11:53,040 --> 00:11:56,720 Speaker 1: I don't mean complete with people or fallen angels or 191 00:11:56,760 --> 00:11:59,880 Speaker 1: anything like that, but what I am talking about is 192 00:12:00,080 --> 00:12:04,199 Speaker 1: that we're seeing already things exposed with tidal recession. We're 193 00:12:04,240 --> 00:12:07,839 Speaker 1: seeing things exposed, for instance, in the Sahara Desert, some 194 00:12:07,920 --> 00:12:10,280 Speaker 1: of the winds now that are you know, the land 195 00:12:10,559 --> 00:12:13,760 Speaker 1: terrestrial winds are going to reveal some of the ancient 196 00:12:13,800 --> 00:12:17,440 Speaker 1: civilizations that have been covered over by the sands of 197 00:12:17,520 --> 00:12:21,160 Speaker 1: time unintended, and now it's time for those sands to 198 00:12:21,200 --> 00:12:25,160 Speaker 1: be turned back over. And some of the literally you 199 00:12:25,240 --> 00:12:27,760 Speaker 1: and I've talked about giants for you know, as long 200 00:12:27,800 --> 00:12:32,319 Speaker 1: as we've talked together on talk radio. Literally the lost 201 00:12:32,520 --> 00:12:36,199 Speaker 1: Empire of the Giants referred to an ancient writing. Even 202 00:12:36,480 --> 00:12:39,400 Speaker 1: the Sahara used to be lush, and one of the 203 00:12:39,520 --> 00:12:43,240 Speaker 1: largest lakes in the world is under the Sahara deepen up. 204 00:12:43,559 --> 00:12:48,559 Speaker 1: So by satellite sensing, remote sensing and watching certain things 205 00:12:48,600 --> 00:12:52,040 Speaker 1: that legends that were only legends, they could never be true, 206 00:12:52,240 --> 00:12:54,880 Speaker 1: and now they're coming to the forefront. That is one 207 00:12:54,880 --> 00:12:58,600 Speaker 1: of the statements I'm making that if you will be 208 00:12:59,400 --> 00:13:03,760 Speaker 1: a civilizations and the land masses, both under the sea 209 00:13:03,840 --> 00:13:06,760 Speaker 1: and the land masses that are under the desert sands 210 00:13:06,920 --> 00:13:10,640 Speaker 1: are going to start to reveal antiquity that is going 211 00:13:10,679 --> 00:13:13,560 Speaker 1: to blow away the standard. All that stuff's just myth 212 00:13:13,600 --> 00:13:17,760 Speaker 1: and legends. Myths and legends have their basis in fact. 213 00:13:18,320 --> 00:13:25,160 Speaker 1: They may especially for instance, a myth maybe you attributes 214 00:13:25,760 --> 00:13:28,160 Speaker 1: added to it after the fact, but Legends, that's a 215 00:13:28,200 --> 00:13:31,760 Speaker 1: different story. And that's especially why the Native Americans and 216 00:13:31,760 --> 00:13:34,440 Speaker 1: I'm going to jump right there. The Native Americans know 217 00:13:34,520 --> 00:13:39,160 Speaker 1: what's going on, especially more so than most of the 218 00:13:39,440 --> 00:13:43,480 Speaker 1: quote white university professors. And I actually sent to George 219 00:13:43,520 --> 00:13:47,480 Speaker 1: Knapp one of the biggest studies ever done on the 220 00:13:47,600 --> 00:13:50,520 Speaker 1: sacred sites of Native Americans. And I don't know if 221 00:13:50,520 --> 00:13:52,400 Speaker 1: you've seen that, if you'd liked it, i'd say it's 222 00:13:52,440 --> 00:13:55,440 Speaker 1: like four hundred pages or something. I'll have George told 223 00:13:55,480 --> 00:13:59,000 Speaker 1: me about it. Yeah, But anyway, it's their conclusion that 224 00:13:59,160 --> 00:14:03,480 Speaker 1: the Star Game and the mystical places of the Native 225 00:14:03,480 --> 00:14:05,719 Speaker 1: Americans are going to play a very important part of 226 00:14:05,720 --> 00:14:07,760 Speaker 1: the future. And this thing was done I think about 227 00:14:07,760 --> 00:14:11,240 Speaker 1: ten fifteen years. Does that include Hopis, Oh yeah, I 228 00:14:11,240 --> 00:14:12,800 Speaker 1: mean they're right at the center of it. And by 229 00:14:12,840 --> 00:14:15,920 Speaker 1: the way, you know, you know Cliff Mahood. You've met him, 230 00:14:16,200 --> 00:14:21,120 Speaker 1: Quim the Zuni Elder. You know Cliff, don't you? Yeah, yeah, yeah, 231 00:14:21,160 --> 00:14:22,960 Speaker 1: I just talked to him. He's going to be an 232 00:14:22,960 --> 00:14:25,760 Speaker 1: executive I believe he's gonna He's agreed to be the 233 00:14:25,800 --> 00:14:30,080 Speaker 1: executive producer on the next True Legends film and Cliff 234 00:14:30,240 --> 00:14:32,040 Speaker 1: knows what he's talking about. I had the joy of 235 00:14:32,080 --> 00:14:34,600 Speaker 1: spending about a week with him in the Utah Desert 236 00:14:34,640 --> 00:14:38,520 Speaker 1: when we did Holocaust of Giants. Now I'm jumping around 237 00:14:38,560 --> 00:14:42,680 Speaker 1: for this reason because we're going to be talking about 238 00:14:42,920 --> 00:14:46,480 Speaker 1: in the next True Legends, you know, the stargates, the 239 00:14:46,560 --> 00:14:49,680 Speaker 1: star people, the aliens, and we're going to be talking 240 00:14:49,760 --> 00:14:52,400 Speaker 1: about in a context that has yet to be breached 241 00:14:52,800 --> 00:14:56,440 Speaker 1: or approached by anybody so far. And you know, everybody's 242 00:14:56,480 --> 00:14:59,480 Speaker 1: doing a great job, but everybody has their area of 243 00:14:59,520 --> 00:15:03,680 Speaker 1: expert piece, and for instance, there are places that are 244 00:15:03,760 --> 00:15:08,360 Speaker 1: just mind boggling. And again, I think it's critical that 245 00:15:08,440 --> 00:15:12,680 Speaker 1: people understand that just because everybody agrees to something that's 246 00:15:12,720 --> 00:15:15,880 Speaker 1: wrong doesn't make it right. So they've got to learned that, 247 00:15:15,920 --> 00:15:18,480 Speaker 1: you know, there are there are rogues out there, and 248 00:15:18,560 --> 00:15:21,160 Speaker 1: sometimes they need to pay attention to the rogues because 249 00:15:21,240 --> 00:15:25,000 Speaker 1: what happens if to go along to get along, they're 250 00:15:25,040 --> 00:15:28,040 Speaker 1: going along the wrong way. Listen to more Coast to 251 00:15:28,080 --> 00:15:31,920 Speaker 1: Coast AM every weeknight at one am Eastern, and go 252 00:15:32,000 --> 00:15:34,240 Speaker 1: to Coast to Coast am dot com for more