1 00:00:00,320 --> 00:00:05,720 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:05,000 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 2: Doctor Scott. Let's jump back into your book, Aliens in 3 00:00:07,520 --> 00:00:10,600 Speaker 2: the Apocalypse. The meaning of alien messages. I've talked about 4 00:00:10,640 --> 00:00:13,000 Speaker 2: it on this program before. I kind of call them 5 00:00:13,039 --> 00:00:16,279 Speaker 2: sort of alien editorials where they lecture us, and these, 6 00:00:16,720 --> 00:00:19,960 Speaker 2: you know, the limited encounters where we have specific information 7 00:00:20,040 --> 00:00:23,960 Speaker 2: from them. They're sharing a fairly consistent message that we 8 00:00:24,000 --> 00:00:26,160 Speaker 2: need to quit messing with nukes, we need to quit 9 00:00:27,040 --> 00:00:29,760 Speaker 2: messing up our planet, we need to get our act together. 10 00:00:29,880 --> 00:00:32,240 Speaker 2: Can you give me a sense of how far back 11 00:00:32,280 --> 00:00:36,120 Speaker 2: those kind of messages go when we started hearing those 12 00:00:36,200 --> 00:00:36,880 Speaker 2: kind of themes. 13 00:00:38,840 --> 00:00:41,320 Speaker 3: Well, I think so far as messing up our planet, 14 00:00:41,360 --> 00:00:44,319 Speaker 3: that's something that we've started doing recently. I don't think 15 00:00:44,360 --> 00:00:49,560 Speaker 3: we were really as disastrous before as we are now. 16 00:00:51,000 --> 00:01:00,680 Speaker 3: And well, since we've viewed UFOs of spaceships, some people 17 00:01:00,760 --> 00:01:05,399 Speaker 3: have some people have said they received messages, but such 18 00:01:05,440 --> 00:01:13,800 Speaker 3: as getting along peacefully and saving our planet. The UFO 19 00:01:13,880 --> 00:01:19,040 Speaker 3: phenomenon may have gone way way back as far as 20 00:01:19,120 --> 00:01:20,160 Speaker 3: recorded history. 21 00:01:22,120 --> 00:01:24,640 Speaker 2: Yeah, I guess the message is about blowing ourselves up. 22 00:01:24,760 --> 00:01:29,400 Speaker 2: Didn't didn't really pop up until we started building nuclear weapons. Though. Correct. 23 00:01:31,360 --> 00:01:34,240 Speaker 3: Yeah, I think our first bomb went off in nineteen 24 00:01:34,400 --> 00:01:42,440 Speaker 3: forty five, and what we view as UFOs began in 25 00:01:42,520 --> 00:01:46,679 Speaker 3: nineteen forty seven, although this might have been other ones 26 00:01:46,680 --> 00:01:48,560 Speaker 3: that nobody interpreted that way too. 27 00:01:49,480 --> 00:01:51,760 Speaker 2: You make the point that these messages that are shared 28 00:01:51,840 --> 00:01:55,840 Speaker 2: with contact ees abductees, it's sort of a democratic in 29 00:01:55,840 --> 00:01:58,160 Speaker 2: a sense that they don't land on the White House 30 00:01:58,240 --> 00:02:01,280 Speaker 2: lawn and make some announcement done mass media. They tell 31 00:02:01,320 --> 00:02:04,440 Speaker 2: this story, the same message over and over to individuals, 32 00:02:04,440 --> 00:02:08,760 Speaker 2: one at a time, or sometimes in small groups. Correct. Yes, 33 00:02:10,760 --> 00:02:11,440 Speaker 2: we'll talk about that. 34 00:02:12,919 --> 00:02:15,960 Speaker 3: They're not going through our hierarchy. I mean usually, I 35 00:02:16,000 --> 00:02:19,000 Speaker 3: mean right now we have kind of a male archy 36 00:02:19,080 --> 00:02:22,000 Speaker 3: with the males on top of the White House and 37 00:02:22,120 --> 00:02:26,720 Speaker 3: Putin and everybody. And if they want to be officially 38 00:02:26,800 --> 00:02:31,519 Speaker 3: recognized by us, they need to sort of recognize our 39 00:02:31,720 --> 00:02:34,720 Speaker 3: social setup, and they don't appear to be doing that. 40 00:02:36,800 --> 00:02:38,840 Speaker 2: And you think one reason for that might be that 41 00:02:38,960 --> 00:02:46,440 Speaker 2: they are female centric civilizations that they developed through female 42 00:02:46,680 --> 00:02:52,120 Speaker 2: dominated societies or civilizations. You make the case that for humans, 43 00:02:52,240 --> 00:02:54,919 Speaker 2: may be the most important building blocks of our current 44 00:02:54,919 --> 00:02:57,720 Speaker 2: civilizations were done by women and not by men. 45 00:02:59,480 --> 00:03:05,239 Speaker 3: Yes, the we have the Conquistador attitude of alpha males 46 00:03:05,280 --> 00:03:07,840 Speaker 3: and all that of males being in charge, and they 47 00:03:08,440 --> 00:03:11,880 Speaker 3: are in charge by violence and brutality and swords and 48 00:03:11,919 --> 00:03:19,000 Speaker 3: all that. Well, our alien appearances often are skinny little females, 49 00:03:20,120 --> 00:03:23,200 Speaker 3: and often who they appear to our females and children. 50 00:03:23,320 --> 00:03:27,000 Speaker 3: They're not necessarily to our top leaders. And that's sole 51 00:03:27,440 --> 00:03:31,280 Speaker 3: that's ignoring our hierarchy. But they're giving the impression that 52 00:03:32,040 --> 00:03:36,800 Speaker 3: we should pay more attention to our females instead of 53 00:03:36,920 --> 00:03:43,400 Speaker 3: our males, and we're solving our problems, such as it 54 00:03:43,560 --> 00:03:48,440 Speaker 3: aggression by being more aggressive. I mean, like you're not 55 00:03:48,520 --> 00:03:52,440 Speaker 3: hearing messages from the UFOs that say, make bigger bombs 56 00:03:52,440 --> 00:03:58,640 Speaker 3: and kill more people, just the opposite. And so I 57 00:03:58,680 --> 00:04:02,440 Speaker 3: was saying that maybe they're asking us to pay attention 58 00:04:02,560 --> 00:04:07,040 Speaker 3: to other ideas of how we were founded. So I 59 00:04:07,080 --> 00:04:11,680 Speaker 3: was giving a lot of information about human and animal 60 00:04:11,800 --> 00:04:16,919 Speaker 3: females and their importance and giving suggestions that may be 61 00:04:20,200 --> 00:04:26,000 Speaker 3: our civilization was founded in groups of females rather than 62 00:04:26,760 --> 00:04:30,840 Speaker 3: killer eights, which is a standard explanation. The standard explanation 63 00:04:31,000 --> 00:04:34,000 Speaker 3: is that we became cognivores and started killing animals and 64 00:04:34,040 --> 00:04:38,160 Speaker 3: that's how we became successful. Well, that's an old theory, 65 00:04:38,640 --> 00:04:42,040 Speaker 3: but it's very widespread, but there's not a whole lot 66 00:04:42,040 --> 00:04:43,120 Speaker 3: of evidence for it. 67 00:04:43,960 --> 00:04:46,880 Speaker 2: Well, you do present evidence that backs up a lot 68 00:04:46,920 --> 00:04:50,159 Speaker 2: of your central contentions and that in human civilization it's 69 00:04:50,440 --> 00:04:58,320 Speaker 2: the female contributions that are most important, for example, language, writing, communication, 70 00:04:58,520 --> 00:05:01,880 Speaker 2: So much of the fundamental commun medications that are documented 71 00:05:01,880 --> 00:05:04,200 Speaker 2: through history happened from mother to child. Correct. 72 00:05:05,480 --> 00:05:09,600 Speaker 3: Yes, And I was the people that wrote about the 73 00:05:09,680 --> 00:05:14,520 Speaker 3: killer eight, which is the standard explanation and the most widespread, 74 00:05:14,880 --> 00:05:19,360 Speaker 3: and what everybody views doesn't have a lot to back 75 00:05:19,400 --> 00:05:21,799 Speaker 3: it up because the people that were writing that didn't 76 00:05:21,800 --> 00:05:27,520 Speaker 3: know anything about mammal behavior and were mammals. And most 77 00:05:27,600 --> 00:05:32,320 Speaker 3: mammals that form groups form female groups that are presented 78 00:05:32,360 --> 00:05:35,200 Speaker 3: often as male harems, and the males like the females, 79 00:05:35,240 --> 00:05:39,680 Speaker 3: but actually most mammal groups of females that related females 80 00:05:39,760 --> 00:05:42,200 Speaker 3: like grandmothers and mothers and so on down the line, 81 00:05:43,279 --> 00:05:46,599 Speaker 3: and the males are usually kind of temporary and fight 82 00:05:46,680 --> 00:05:49,840 Speaker 3: each other and one is there for a while and 83 00:05:49,960 --> 00:05:53,839 Speaker 3: goes out. But if we are like the other mammals, 84 00:05:53,880 --> 00:05:57,800 Speaker 3: we probably started out as female groups, and for most 85 00:05:57,839 --> 00:06:04,159 Speaker 3: of the time we probably were. And what it's good 86 00:06:04,200 --> 00:06:08,640 Speaker 3: evidence is that the first art in the first cave 87 00:06:08,720 --> 00:06:13,200 Speaker 3: drawings and everything else, mainly emphasized females. And if you 88 00:06:13,279 --> 00:06:15,800 Speaker 3: go back far enough to where they find the very 89 00:06:15,800 --> 00:06:21,279 Speaker 3: first carving, it's a female. If you go during most 90 00:06:21,279 --> 00:06:23,360 Speaker 3: of the time humans have been here, we've been here 91 00:06:23,360 --> 00:06:27,000 Speaker 3: about two hundred thousand years. During most of the time 92 00:06:27,080 --> 00:06:33,360 Speaker 3: except very recently, most of the artists featured females. They're 93 00:06:33,680 --> 00:06:37,400 Speaker 3: just statues of females. And they've also looked at cave 94 00:06:38,240 --> 00:06:44,760 Speaker 3: drawings and oftentimes these have handprints on them and looked 95 00:06:44,800 --> 00:06:48,159 Speaker 3: at those, and usually they're the handprints of the size 96 00:06:48,160 --> 00:06:52,240 Speaker 3: of women and children, sort of the comparative finger lengths 97 00:06:52,279 --> 00:06:55,840 Speaker 3: of females, And so they have that standard picture of 98 00:06:56,400 --> 00:07:00,320 Speaker 3: the males drewing, making drawings on the caves, or they're 99 00:07:00,360 --> 00:07:03,080 Speaker 3: hunting and everything. But I was saying that it's more 100 00:07:03,279 --> 00:07:07,040 Speaker 3: likely that they were females and children, and the females 101 00:07:07,080 --> 00:07:10,520 Speaker 3: are doing the same thing females do today and all 102 00:07:10,560 --> 00:07:16,000 Speaker 3: through time, is tell their children about the world and 103 00:07:17,360 --> 00:07:21,120 Speaker 3: tell them about animals and draw animals and things. And 104 00:07:21,200 --> 00:07:23,480 Speaker 3: I was saying that if you can draw a picture 105 00:07:23,520 --> 00:07:26,600 Speaker 3: of an animal, you have an idea of what it 106 00:07:26,720 --> 00:07:30,720 Speaker 3: is and if you have that idea, you can use it. 107 00:07:31,000 --> 00:07:32,880 Speaker 3: You can think in symbols, and you can not only 108 00:07:32,960 --> 00:07:36,760 Speaker 3: draw it, which you can have. Language tells you this 109 00:07:36,840 --> 00:07:39,040 Speaker 3: is a this is a cow, this is a sheep, 110 00:07:39,080 --> 00:07:44,400 Speaker 3: and so on, and that our ability to think in 111 00:07:44,560 --> 00:07:48,880 Speaker 3: symbols might be a lot more reason for our success. 112 00:07:48,880 --> 00:07:52,320 Speaker 3: And men sharpening up rocks and attacking animals. 113 00:07:53,920 --> 00:07:56,200 Speaker 2: Well, I think probably there are parts of your book 114 00:07:56,240 --> 00:08:00,120 Speaker 2: that won't make make you real popular among some males 115 00:08:00,160 --> 00:08:02,600 Speaker 2: in the society, but you make a persuasive argument in 116 00:08:02,680 --> 00:08:07,200 Speaker 2: that you know males are physically dominant, stronger, tougher. A 117 00:08:07,240 --> 00:08:11,680 Speaker 2: lot of what the drives civilization is the warlike impulses 118 00:08:11,720 --> 00:08:15,600 Speaker 2: and building bigger and better machines to dominate not only 119 00:08:15,640 --> 00:08:20,040 Speaker 2: other humans other civilizations, but the natural environment and animals. 120 00:08:20,520 --> 00:08:23,760 Speaker 2: But it's the when men are competing against other men, 121 00:08:24,160 --> 00:08:26,640 Speaker 2: it's largely to impress women. Correct. 122 00:08:28,000 --> 00:08:32,720 Speaker 3: Yeah, they usually say the epic high part of evolution 123 00:08:32,920 --> 00:08:37,040 Speaker 3: is the weapon or the big fangs and all that. Well, 124 00:08:38,240 --> 00:08:41,840 Speaker 3: that's not the most importance. The animals have these big 125 00:08:41,840 --> 00:08:46,600 Speaker 3: fangs and everything to site of other males and impressed females, 126 00:08:46,640 --> 00:08:49,360 Speaker 3: but they never say what the female does and the 127 00:08:49,360 --> 00:08:53,680 Speaker 3: female probably has a lot more to do with survival 128 00:08:53,880 --> 00:08:57,880 Speaker 3: than the males do, because what's left out is what 129 00:08:57,880 --> 00:09:00,920 Speaker 3: the female does well. The males make all this big 130 00:09:00,920 --> 00:09:05,160 Speaker 3: app ratus, fighting other males for dominance and everything for 131 00:09:05,320 --> 00:09:11,920 Speaker 3: each other, but they're fighting for the females, and usually 132 00:09:12,000 --> 00:09:15,880 Speaker 3: after mating, that that's the end of the male input. Well, 133 00:09:15,880 --> 00:09:20,040 Speaker 3: the female does everything else, such as the mating, the pregnancy, 134 00:09:20,559 --> 00:09:26,480 Speaker 3: the lactation, raising the young, and showing the young around, 135 00:09:26,520 --> 00:09:30,360 Speaker 3: and that may take many, many, many years. And that's 136 00:09:30,720 --> 00:09:35,360 Speaker 3: why that's probably a lot more important to the survival 137 00:09:35,440 --> 00:09:37,079 Speaker 3: than the male's fighting. 138 00:09:38,760 --> 00:09:41,560 Speaker 2: Back to the part about the visitors of the aliens, 139 00:09:42,120 --> 00:09:44,280 Speaker 2: you know, I guess most of us never even think 140 00:09:44,320 --> 00:09:49,920 Speaker 2: about gender or sex of aliens. The common image of aliens, 141 00:09:49,920 --> 00:09:52,880 Speaker 2: what they look like, these spindly little humanoids. It just 142 00:09:52,920 --> 00:09:57,200 Speaker 2: doesn't come up because there are no obvious gender physical 143 00:09:57,240 --> 00:10:00,160 Speaker 2: characteristics that we would associate with the gender sex. 144 00:10:00,240 --> 00:10:04,640 Speaker 3: Right, Well, they don't have big muscles, and if you 145 00:10:04,679 --> 00:10:09,000 Speaker 3: look at the moldings and like Roswell, they're females and 146 00:10:09,320 --> 00:10:12,199 Speaker 3: you don't see very many of them that show male 147 00:10:12,320 --> 00:10:13,920 Speaker 3: anatomical features. 148 00:10:15,720 --> 00:10:18,840 Speaker 2: So your guests would be that these alien civilizations wherever 149 00:10:18,840 --> 00:10:22,760 Speaker 2: they're from, that they develop in a lot of ways 150 00:10:22,800 --> 00:10:27,000 Speaker 2: as humans have with female centric influences. 151 00:10:28,240 --> 00:10:33,280 Speaker 3: Well, we're setting up to blow ourselves up, and I mean, 152 00:10:33,320 --> 00:10:36,599 Speaker 3: I don't know if we will, but they may be 153 00:10:36,720 --> 00:10:40,560 Speaker 3: emphasizing to us that we should have a more females. 154 00:10:40,640 --> 00:10:44,680 Speaker 3: Usually in mammals their cooperative, The males are fighting each other, 155 00:10:45,000 --> 00:10:47,640 Speaker 3: the females get along fine. Usually there's no wars with 156 00:10:47,800 --> 00:10:54,240 Speaker 3: females in the animal world. So they may be telling 157 00:10:54,360 --> 00:10:58,200 Speaker 3: us that we need to understand our own females and 158 00:10:58,240 --> 00:11:02,000 Speaker 3: our own evolution better than the picture we have now, 159 00:11:02,040 --> 00:11:06,000 Speaker 3: which is encouraging us to build bigger weapons and kill 160 00:11:06,040 --> 00:11:13,560 Speaker 3: more people and build up our competitive military and spend 161 00:11:13,840 --> 00:11:14,400 Speaker 3: time on. 162 00:11:14,320 --> 00:11:18,240 Speaker 2: That cold you share with us some of the messages 163 00:11:18,320 --> 00:11:22,360 Speaker 2: that have been conveyed to humans by them, whoever they are, 164 00:11:22,520 --> 00:11:26,040 Speaker 2: wherever they're from, that illustrate the point that you know, 165 00:11:26,080 --> 00:11:30,120 Speaker 2: we're getting these messages that are not necessarily predictions of apocalypse, 166 00:11:30,520 --> 00:11:34,760 Speaker 2: but they're warnings and sort of lessons that they hope 167 00:11:34,840 --> 00:11:37,320 Speaker 2: we will learn. What are some examples of the ones 168 00:11:37,360 --> 00:11:39,520 Speaker 2: that stand out to you that you mentioned in your book. 169 00:11:40,520 --> 00:11:44,719 Speaker 3: Well, one I mentioned in particular was Fatima and this 170 00:11:44,880 --> 00:11:55,520 Speaker 3: was where around seventy thousand people experience the event. It 171 00:11:55,640 --> 00:12:01,040 Speaker 3: started out with three children who were taking care of 172 00:12:01,080 --> 00:12:06,120 Speaker 3: sheep shepherd people, and they had this experience of seeing 173 00:12:06,160 --> 00:12:12,840 Speaker 3: this man who said, who said there will be some 174 00:12:12,880 --> 00:12:17,120 Speaker 3: more experiences. Well, there were every thirteenth of the month 175 00:12:17,200 --> 00:12:21,320 Speaker 3: from then until I think it was October the thirteenth. 176 00:12:21,760 --> 00:12:25,840 Speaker 3: And their parents didn't believe them and told them they 177 00:12:25,880 --> 00:12:28,680 Speaker 3: were crazy and all that, but they kept on talking 178 00:12:28,679 --> 00:12:31,559 Speaker 3: about it, and especially the younger kids that didn't know 179 00:12:31,600 --> 00:12:35,480 Speaker 3: that they were supposed to shut up. They were using 180 00:12:35,520 --> 00:12:41,520 Speaker 3: sophisticated language and things that caused the adults to wonder 181 00:12:41,600 --> 00:12:44,000 Speaker 3: what was going on. But anyway, they were supposed to 182 00:12:44,000 --> 00:12:48,600 Speaker 3: have a big showing on the thirteenth I think it 183 00:12:48,640 --> 00:12:52,800 Speaker 3: was October, and a vast amount of people had heard 184 00:12:52,800 --> 00:13:00,719 Speaker 3: about it, came to see it, photographers and everything, and 185 00:13:01,200 --> 00:13:03,760 Speaker 3: the person they were talking to had the appearance of 186 00:13:03,800 --> 00:13:07,920 Speaker 3: a female, and you'd think, you know, God's supposed to 187 00:13:07,960 --> 00:13:10,080 Speaker 3: be a deity, is supposed to be a male in 188 00:13:10,160 --> 00:13:13,319 Speaker 3: all these religions that a male would appear. Once that 189 00:13:13,559 --> 00:13:17,240 Speaker 3: was a female, and it was called a miracle where 190 00:13:17,679 --> 00:13:22,080 Speaker 3: the sun disappeared. It was it was raining, the sun disappeared. 191 00:13:22,440 --> 00:13:25,480 Speaker 3: Then this thing that looked like the sun came down 192 00:13:25,480 --> 00:13:30,440 Speaker 3: from the sky and moved around and dried up people 193 00:13:31,160 --> 00:13:33,200 Speaker 3: and then went back up. It was a miracle of 194 00:13:33,200 --> 00:13:40,600 Speaker 3: the sun. And they also gave predictions, and one of 195 00:13:40,640 --> 00:13:44,680 Speaker 3: them has been a secret from the Catholic Church, but 196 00:13:44,760 --> 00:13:48,439 Speaker 3: it sounded like it was like apocalypse or the end 197 00:13:48,480 --> 00:13:51,440 Speaker 3: of the world or something. And a number of other 198 00:13:53,480 --> 00:13:56,600 Speaker 3: predictions and things like that have also said that that's 199 00:13:56,600 --> 00:14:01,559 Speaker 3: where we're headed for. And there may be are letting 200 00:14:01,640 --> 00:14:06,600 Speaker 3: us know that our social setup of male aggration and 201 00:14:06,720 --> 00:14:09,600 Speaker 3: the idea that it solves all the problems may be wrong, 202 00:14:10,000 --> 00:14:12,960 Speaker 3: and maybe we should look at the other half, which 203 00:14:13,080 --> 00:14:17,400 Speaker 3: actually is dominant, and females usually show cooperative behavior and 204 00:14:17,440 --> 00:14:22,840 Speaker 3: help each other out rather than the antagonistic male behavior. 205 00:14:24,000 --> 00:14:27,600 Speaker 3: And I was saying that maybe, I mean, that's a 206 00:14:27,680 --> 00:14:30,400 Speaker 3: lot of the messages that are spoken, but there's also 207 00:14:30,480 --> 00:14:35,840 Speaker 3: the messages in vision, and they're not showing big, threatening 208 00:14:35,880 --> 00:14:42,720 Speaker 3: men with weapons like we often do. When we when 209 00:14:45,840 --> 00:14:56,120 Speaker 3: more I hate to say advanced, when society was more 210 00:14:56,400 --> 00:15:04,880 Speaker 3: aggress introduces self to a society that's less aggressive. For example, 211 00:15:04,880 --> 00:15:07,920 Speaker 3: when the Europeans came to the New World. They have 212 00:15:08,040 --> 00:15:10,960 Speaker 3: pressed the Indians and a lot of that sort of 213 00:15:10,960 --> 00:15:13,160 Speaker 3: thing has happened. 214 00:15:14,720 --> 00:15:17,840 Speaker 2: Back to Fatima. For a second, you're saying flat out 215 00:15:17,880 --> 00:15:20,120 Speaker 2: you think that that was a UFO event, not some 216 00:15:20,240 --> 00:15:22,840 Speaker 2: spiritual religious phenomena, right. 217 00:15:23,760 --> 00:15:28,120 Speaker 3: No, I think it could be interpreted as religious or UFO, 218 00:15:28,280 --> 00:15:35,760 Speaker 3: either one or even asta. I think it's a message, 219 00:15:35,840 --> 00:15:44,760 Speaker 3: but it's given in visions and words both. 220 00:15:45,560 --> 00:15:47,840 Speaker 2: We don't know what that third message was, or do 221 00:15:47,920 --> 00:15:48,800 Speaker 2: we do you have an idea? 222 00:15:50,960 --> 00:15:56,080 Speaker 3: I well, one of the messages, this was during World 223 00:15:56,080 --> 00:16:00,760 Speaker 3: War One, and one of the messages is or would end, 224 00:16:01,240 --> 00:16:05,240 Speaker 3: but there'd be another war and then which came true. 225 00:16:05,520 --> 00:16:08,120 Speaker 3: They predicted that two of the kids would die, and 226 00:16:08,160 --> 00:16:10,960 Speaker 3: that came true. But there was a third one that 227 00:16:13,080 --> 00:16:16,080 Speaker 3: people are guessing it was the end of the world 228 00:16:16,200 --> 00:16:18,440 Speaker 3: or something, but I don't know for sure if they 229 00:16:19,400 --> 00:16:20,120 Speaker 3: know what it is. 230 00:16:22,680 --> 00:16:27,640 Speaker 2: The messages apocalyptic sort of messages from them, whoever they are. 231 00:16:28,080 --> 00:16:31,720 Speaker 2: They're not really predictions that we're going to blow ourselves up. 232 00:16:32,040 --> 00:16:35,000 Speaker 2: They're more like warnings, hey, get your act together or 233 00:16:35,040 --> 00:16:36,680 Speaker 2: else kind of a thing, right. 234 00:16:37,800 --> 00:16:42,840 Speaker 3: Right, We hope we don't boil ourselves up. And it 235 00:16:42,880 --> 00:16:45,560 Speaker 3: seemed to be pretty interested in what we do too. 236 00:16:47,400 --> 00:16:49,280 Speaker 2: Does that make you think that they live here, that 237 00:16:49,320 --> 00:16:52,000 Speaker 2: there is interested in us, but they're more interested in 238 00:16:52,040 --> 00:16:53,920 Speaker 2: maybe the planet because they're here. 239 00:16:55,640 --> 00:16:59,960 Speaker 3: Well, yeah, I think that probably we don't take their 240 00:17:00,000 --> 00:17:05,000 Speaker 3: everything in with our senses. I mean, the universe, according 241 00:17:05,000 --> 00:17:09,360 Speaker 3: to what there you go by, might be like twenty 242 00:17:09,400 --> 00:17:13,120 Speaker 3: six billion years old. Earth is only four billion years old. 243 00:17:13,400 --> 00:17:18,359 Speaker 3: There may be lots of entities in the universe, there 244 00:17:18,359 --> 00:17:22,120 Speaker 3: are nothing like us and way way beyond us, so 245 00:17:22,200 --> 00:17:24,760 Speaker 3: that we wouldn't even be able to sense them unless 246 00:17:25,640 --> 00:17:32,560 Speaker 3: they project into our minds. And so I think that 247 00:17:34,200 --> 00:17:36,520 Speaker 3: there's probably a lot more recognition of what Earth is 248 00:17:36,560 --> 00:17:40,120 Speaker 3: around the universe, and we think there is because we're 249 00:17:40,160 --> 00:17:42,080 Speaker 3: not receiving signals that we know of. 250 00:17:42,840 --> 00:17:46,120 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 251 00:17:46,119 --> 00:17:49,399 Speaker 1: one am Eastern and go to Coast to coastam dot 252 00:17:49,400 --> 00:17:50,280 Speaker 1: com for more