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Now here's a highlight from Coast 11 00:00:34,400 --> 00:00:37,960 Speaker 1: to Coast a M on iHeart Radio. George Norri back 12 00:00:38,000 --> 00:00:41,920 Speaker 1: with Bob Fletcher as we talked about the Bureau Planet X. Bob, 13 00:00:42,000 --> 00:00:44,839 Speaker 1: do you think Planet X might have been responsible for 14 00:00:44,880 --> 00:00:50,080 Speaker 1: the flood of Noah? Yes, yeah, yeah, I do again, 15 00:00:50,640 --> 00:00:57,560 Speaker 1: going by the multiple scriptures, including not just the not 16 00:00:57,720 --> 00:01:01,120 Speaker 1: just the Christian Bible, which would kind of indicate that 17 00:01:01,120 --> 00:01:05,680 Speaker 1: that was what took place. Uh, And of course it's 18 00:01:05,959 --> 00:01:08,800 Speaker 1: it's written up in a few places where they referred 19 00:01:08,800 --> 00:01:12,240 Speaker 1: to it as um oh gosh. Some of the kind 20 00:01:12,240 --> 00:01:14,640 Speaker 1: of can't think of the word, I'm just missing it 21 00:01:14,680 --> 00:01:19,680 Speaker 1: out here right now. But it is implied and indicated 22 00:01:19,720 --> 00:01:24,600 Speaker 1: in the Bible. And besides that, places like the monks 23 00:01:24,600 --> 00:01:28,280 Speaker 1: on the top of the Himalayans, you know, five years ago, 24 00:01:28,400 --> 00:01:32,720 Speaker 1: and the the Red Chinese excuse of the Chinese when 25 00:01:32,720 --> 00:01:36,399 Speaker 1: they had the emperor had these all of these astronomers 26 00:01:36,440 --> 00:01:41,520 Speaker 1: working for him, and they they actually plotted it as 27 00:01:41,560 --> 00:01:45,320 Speaker 1: it came by, as it approached and then came around, 28 00:01:45,360 --> 00:01:48,640 Speaker 1: and then all the crazy effects of storms, and of 29 00:01:48,680 --> 00:01:53,760 Speaker 1: course the biblical description besides Noah's floods, but the biblical 30 00:01:53,880 --> 00:01:58,360 Speaker 1: descriptions of being uh killed by hail storms, of of 31 00:01:58,560 --> 00:02:01,960 Speaker 1: burning burning stars falling down from the sky and things 32 00:02:01,960 --> 00:02:06,240 Speaker 1: of that suit uh and those all would be potentially 33 00:02:07,080 --> 00:02:10,360 Speaker 1: events that would take place when the Bureau makes the 34 00:02:10,480 --> 00:02:14,680 Speaker 1: journey around the Sun and back out. Now, the scary 35 00:02:14,760 --> 00:02:19,640 Speaker 1: part is obviously what would take place as it comes in. 36 00:02:20,240 --> 00:02:23,440 Speaker 1: It will pretty much take out all of our satellites, 37 00:02:23,840 --> 00:02:28,400 Speaker 1: if for no other reason. Strictly the electromagnetic pulse type 38 00:02:28,400 --> 00:02:31,520 Speaker 1: of it would have. It's like detonating a newke in 39 00:02:31,560 --> 00:02:37,280 Speaker 1: the atmosphere, right and um. Additionally, what it will do. 40 00:02:37,480 --> 00:02:41,320 Speaker 1: According to folks that are smart around this than I 41 00:02:41,360 --> 00:02:43,639 Speaker 1: am as a matter of fact, is that they would 42 00:02:44,480 --> 00:02:47,600 Speaker 1: It would probably take a hundred and fifty five days altogether. 43 00:02:48,320 --> 00:02:52,920 Speaker 1: It would go around the Sun the first time. Passing around, 44 00:02:53,080 --> 00:02:58,359 Speaker 1: we will go through its tail of debris, which would 45 00:02:58,400 --> 00:03:03,000 Speaker 1: be an unbelievable meteor showers period of time. But you know, 46 00:03:03,120 --> 00:03:07,000 Speaker 1: pulverizing the Earth with with all that space junk that 47 00:03:07,120 --> 00:03:10,919 Speaker 1: is dragging millions of miles of it. Uh and again 48 00:03:11,240 --> 00:03:20,000 Speaker 1: comparing it to uh, you know, other meteoric type of events. Uh. 49 00:03:20,080 --> 00:03:24,400 Speaker 1: The we would pass through it one time, then it 50 00:03:24,480 --> 00:03:27,800 Speaker 1: will go around the Sun and back out the other side, 51 00:03:28,200 --> 00:03:32,480 Speaker 1: and on our regular uh run around the revolving around 52 00:03:32,480 --> 00:03:34,840 Speaker 1: the Sun, we would go through it a second time. 53 00:03:35,440 --> 00:03:41,000 Speaker 1: So the potential of extreme fires from burning debris and 54 00:03:41,000 --> 00:03:44,560 Speaker 1: all that type of thing, you know, it's almost unimaginable. 55 00:03:44,840 --> 00:03:48,520 Speaker 1: Besides the extraordinary flooding and all the rest of the 56 00:03:48,560 --> 00:03:51,920 Speaker 1: problems that would come with it. The electro magnetic impulse 57 00:03:52,000 --> 00:03:58,360 Speaker 1: problem would be another whole separate problem. So it would 58 00:03:58,400 --> 00:04:01,200 Speaker 1: be a heck of a mess in the period of time. 59 00:04:01,240 --> 00:04:05,480 Speaker 1: People that are analyzing it, astronomers saying that it would 60 00:04:05,480 --> 00:04:09,960 Speaker 1: be like a hundred and fifty day period of time 61 00:04:10,040 --> 00:04:12,120 Speaker 1: between going through it once and then going through it 62 00:04:12,200 --> 00:04:15,760 Speaker 1: a second time. Bob, what do you think people are 63 00:04:15,800 --> 00:04:20,400 Speaker 1: acting strange and weird and that Planet X could have 64 00:04:20,520 --> 00:04:23,159 Speaker 1: something to do with it, some kind of gravitational pull 65 00:04:23,200 --> 00:04:26,760 Speaker 1: on them or something. Well, I don't know. I don't 66 00:04:27,560 --> 00:04:30,559 Speaker 1: I used to be out on the road three hundred 67 00:04:30,680 --> 00:04:34,800 Speaker 1: days of the year doing uh lecture presentations on government 68 00:04:34,839 --> 00:04:38,280 Speaker 1: corruption for many years, but then I haven't done that 69 00:04:38,560 --> 00:04:41,960 Speaker 1: quite a while, so I haven't been exposed to too 70 00:04:41,960 --> 00:04:45,520 Speaker 1: many screwballs. They're out there to give you an update. 71 00:04:45,800 --> 00:04:48,200 Speaker 1: I don't know. I mean, people are just acting strange 72 00:04:48,440 --> 00:04:51,359 Speaker 1: years ago. Yeah, it feels like it to be. Maybe 73 00:04:51,360 --> 00:04:53,760 Speaker 1: when we get calls we can pull some people to 74 00:04:53,960 --> 00:04:55,960 Speaker 1: they just a lot of people just seem to be 75 00:04:56,560 --> 00:04:59,760 Speaker 1: uptight lately. Oh well, the well, of course, if they're 76 00:04:59,839 --> 00:05:02,640 Speaker 1: up site, they've got good reason. For those that are 77 00:05:03,600 --> 00:05:08,080 Speaker 1: listening to the alternate media, they are getting the news 78 00:05:08,600 --> 00:05:14,000 Speaker 1: that the regular media is intentionally not giving out. You know, 79 00:05:14,320 --> 00:05:18,159 Speaker 1: if you like myself, of course, and you're involved a 80 00:05:18,160 --> 00:05:21,240 Speaker 1: little bit more than most people, uh in terms of 81 00:05:22,120 --> 00:05:27,080 Speaker 1: getting that alternate meeting news media from a lot of directions, 82 00:05:27,480 --> 00:05:31,880 Speaker 1: and likewise, in my situation where I pursue it, probably 83 00:05:32,440 --> 00:05:36,560 Speaker 1: more than the average person. But the news media is uh, 84 00:05:38,080 --> 00:05:40,480 Speaker 1: we might as well not even have the regular news. 85 00:05:40,920 --> 00:05:44,560 Speaker 1: In the old days had ABC, CBS, NBC, and we 86 00:05:44,640 --> 00:05:47,200 Speaker 1: had reliable people. And I say the news was fairly 87 00:05:47,240 --> 00:05:51,840 Speaker 1: good from the nineteen fifties up until about twenty years 88 00:05:52,200 --> 00:05:55,280 Speaker 1: and everybody watched Chronkite. Yeah, all those guys, and they 89 00:05:55,279 --> 00:05:59,239 Speaker 1: were trusted and and we we did get the news 90 00:05:59,480 --> 00:06:02,800 Speaker 1: as could as as good as we could get it. Again, 91 00:06:03,200 --> 00:06:06,960 Speaker 1: you know, the younger folks right now can't imagine not 92 00:06:07,120 --> 00:06:11,359 Speaker 1: having uh websites, web pages and UH and the World 93 00:06:11,400 --> 00:06:14,719 Speaker 1: Wide Web to go to. Uh. But they have to 94 00:06:14,760 --> 00:06:22,000 Speaker 1: realize that just a few years ago, back in the seventies, uh, 95 00:06:22,040 --> 00:06:25,160 Speaker 1: you know, or even in the eighties, in nineteen eighty 96 00:06:25,279 --> 00:06:28,480 Speaker 1: three year around in that period of time, that didn't 97 00:06:28,520 --> 00:06:31,960 Speaker 1: exist and and we we were utilizing. It was a 98 00:06:32,000 --> 00:06:34,719 Speaker 1: big deal if you had a fax machine, because you 99 00:06:34,760 --> 00:06:39,160 Speaker 1: could communicate with people. Uh. And when I started, I 100 00:06:39,520 --> 00:06:43,200 Speaker 1: had interrupted myself a few minutes ago. I started to 101 00:06:43,240 --> 00:06:46,200 Speaker 1: tell you an interesting story about this friend of mine 102 00:06:46,240 --> 00:06:49,080 Speaker 1: that had been working with Bill Casey, the head of 103 00:06:49,080 --> 00:06:52,680 Speaker 1: the CIA with Ronald Reagan. Uh, and it was very 104 00:06:52,720 --> 00:06:55,600 Speaker 1: close and like I said, actually wrote his speeches for 105 00:06:55,680 --> 00:06:59,680 Speaker 1: him most occasions. And uh, it was a lady and 106 00:06:59,760 --> 00:07:03,160 Speaker 1: she I asked her, because when I was living in 107 00:07:03,320 --> 00:07:07,839 Speaker 1: l A in uh like twenty years ago, uh for 108 00:07:07,920 --> 00:07:12,640 Speaker 1: a few years, and we had this extraordinary bomb thing 109 00:07:12,920 --> 00:07:15,800 Speaker 1: of a bomb guy with a big truck and a 110 00:07:15,840 --> 00:07:19,680 Speaker 1: bomb filled supposedly filled with explosives, and and of course 111 00:07:19,720 --> 00:07:23,040 Speaker 1: they shut everything down. And they did this big media coverage, 112 00:07:23,080 --> 00:07:25,680 Speaker 1: had wires coming in through the windows and everything else, 113 00:07:26,120 --> 00:07:29,440 Speaker 1: and it was a big deal in Los Angeles, but 114 00:07:29,560 --> 00:07:33,480 Speaker 1: it went no place. It was on no other news. 115 00:07:33,560 --> 00:07:36,040 Speaker 1: So I asked my friend in the C I I said, 116 00:07:36,640 --> 00:07:40,280 Speaker 1: how did how did they do that? You can't control 117 00:07:41,160 --> 00:07:44,560 Speaker 1: all that media, or how do they do it? And 118 00:07:44,640 --> 00:07:48,400 Speaker 1: she said that a few years earlier they had finally 119 00:07:48,480 --> 00:07:55,200 Speaker 1: succeeded in putting intelligence agents in the positions of management 120 00:07:55,600 --> 00:08:00,640 Speaker 1: of like you pre I, United Press International, Associated US 121 00:08:00,640 --> 00:08:05,679 Speaker 1: and the guys that threw the switches to notify other 122 00:08:05,880 --> 00:08:11,600 Speaker 1: outlying television radio programs about important news. The guy that 123 00:08:11,640 --> 00:08:15,400 Speaker 1: throws the switch, I guess technically, and uh, they she 124 00:08:15,480 --> 00:08:18,440 Speaker 1: said that they had controlled that for a few years, 125 00:08:18,800 --> 00:08:21,920 Speaker 1: and yes, that they did have the ability to pretty 126 00:08:22,000 --> 00:08:26,480 Speaker 1: much throw water. And of course this was before the internet, right, 127 00:08:26,680 --> 00:08:29,800 Speaker 1: social not working and everything else has changed all of that. 128 00:08:30,240 --> 00:08:33,640 Speaker 1: But prior to that, they actually had the ability to 129 00:08:34,559 --> 00:08:37,600 Speaker 1: just not not throw the switch. You don't open the door, 130 00:08:37,720 --> 00:08:40,440 Speaker 1: nobody's going to find out what's going on, and so 131 00:08:40,640 --> 00:08:45,320 Speaker 1: they had terrific control of media at the very highest level. 132 00:08:45,520 --> 00:08:48,200 Speaker 1: Do you see the conditions are out there now that 133 00:08:48,240 --> 00:08:52,880 Speaker 1: are getting more and more drastic, the weather conditions, storms 134 00:08:52,880 --> 00:08:59,080 Speaker 1: are bigger, everything, everything's bigger. Yes, well it's it's mind boggling. Yeah, 135 00:08:59,080 --> 00:09:03,520 Speaker 1: and we're you know, uh a point again, this is 136 00:09:03,559 --> 00:09:07,600 Speaker 1: something that not covered much at all by anybody, with 137 00:09:07,800 --> 00:09:12,600 Speaker 1: the melting of both ice caps the north and the south, 138 00:09:12,679 --> 00:09:17,240 Speaker 1: all right, but particularly up north where they have glaciers 139 00:09:17,920 --> 00:09:22,120 Speaker 1: that are melting like somebody's got a blowtorch on them. 140 00:09:22,200 --> 00:09:24,920 Speaker 1: I mean they are. The melt is like nothing we've 141 00:09:24,920 --> 00:09:29,240 Speaker 1: had in a thousand years. And uh, it's interesting, as 142 00:09:29,280 --> 00:09:32,160 Speaker 1: you could say, you know, like which I mentioned earlier, 143 00:09:32,200 --> 00:09:36,520 Speaker 1: relative to changing the salt content of the entire ocean, 144 00:09:37,120 --> 00:09:42,040 Speaker 1: but what's also happening. A couple of years ago Miami 145 00:09:42,280 --> 00:09:46,640 Speaker 1: reached a point that on high tide in Miami Beach. 146 00:09:46,960 --> 00:09:49,920 Speaker 1: I used to live there for many years. High tide 147 00:09:49,920 --> 00:09:53,679 Speaker 1: in Miami Beach every high tide it was coming in 148 00:09:54,160 --> 00:09:58,160 Speaker 1: six blocks into the city and and and flooding the 149 00:09:58,240 --> 00:10:02,640 Speaker 1: businesses and Miami, the state of Florida. I think the 150 00:10:02,760 --> 00:10:04,960 Speaker 1: number was. I don't know if it was four hundred 151 00:10:05,040 --> 00:10:10,120 Speaker 1: or forty million dollars worth of pumps that automatically have 152 00:10:10,200 --> 00:10:14,320 Speaker 1: been going on in Miami Beach. This is before the hurricanes. 153 00:10:14,360 --> 00:10:18,080 Speaker 1: Had nothing to do with the hurricane to pump this 154 00:10:18,120 --> 00:10:21,200 Speaker 1: out and protect the low lying the low line, which 155 00:10:21,240 --> 00:10:23,679 Speaker 1: is what New Orleans should have done, but their generators 156 00:10:23,720 --> 00:10:27,640 Speaker 1: went out during Katrina. Yeah, and they these places have 157 00:10:27,840 --> 00:10:31,920 Speaker 1: terrible problems. I went and when I lived, and it's 158 00:10:31,920 --> 00:10:34,560 Speaker 1: hard to imagine if you don't live there. I've never 159 00:10:34,640 --> 00:10:38,400 Speaker 1: been there. I lived in Orlando for a while, which 160 00:10:38,440 --> 00:10:40,719 Speaker 1: is where I ran for the United States Congress in 161 00:10:40,840 --> 00:10:45,920 Speaker 1: nine but um and I ran as a Democrat just 162 00:10:46,000 --> 00:10:48,760 Speaker 1: because I was going against the Republican. That didn't mean 163 00:10:48,880 --> 00:10:52,160 Speaker 1: much to be because uh, they're both crooks on both sides, 164 00:10:52,200 --> 00:10:56,199 Speaker 1: so it didn't mean anything. But where I lived in Orlando, 165 00:10:56,559 --> 00:11:00,720 Speaker 1: in my front yard, the we were to well feet 166 00:11:00,800 --> 00:11:05,440 Speaker 1: above sea level. You know it's pretty low. Yeah. And 167 00:11:05,440 --> 00:11:08,640 Speaker 1: and again that was that was in quite a ways. Um. 168 00:11:08,840 --> 00:11:12,280 Speaker 1: You know it was close to Disneyland and all that 169 00:11:12,320 --> 00:11:17,439 Speaker 1: stuff down there. Um. And you don't realize, uh, and 170 00:11:17,600 --> 00:11:20,720 Speaker 1: how many how many waterways? You know what they did 171 00:11:20,800 --> 00:11:23,640 Speaker 1: many years ago down here, They when a contractor went 172 00:11:23,720 --> 00:11:26,640 Speaker 1: in to build homes, they went in and dug a 173 00:11:26,679 --> 00:11:30,280 Speaker 1: big hole, connected it to another hole that already had 174 00:11:30,320 --> 00:11:34,120 Speaker 1: water in it, and sold it as waterfront property. So 175 00:11:34,240 --> 00:11:39,400 Speaker 1: you have this extraordinary inland canal, inland waterways all the time. 176 00:11:39,520 --> 00:11:43,000 Speaker 1: I'm surprised that the storms that just went through there 177 00:11:43,040 --> 00:11:45,760 Speaker 1: it wasn't worse. Listen to more Coast to Coast a 178 00:11:46,040 --> 00:11:49,240 Speaker 1: m every weeknight at one a m. Eastern and go 179 00:11:49,360 --> 00:11:51,560 Speaker 1: to Coast to Coast am dot com for more