1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:05,560 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from coast to coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:04,800 --> 00:00:10,160 Speaker 2: James, does this comet act unusual for a comet? 3 00:00:10,400 --> 00:00:13,080 Speaker 3: Well, in the sense that it is. Yes, it's a comet. 4 00:00:13,320 --> 00:00:17,000 Speaker 3: It is a comet, not an alien spacecraft. What's going 5 00:00:17,040 --> 00:00:20,840 Speaker 3: on is it's moving really fast, so that does two things. 6 00:00:20,920 --> 00:00:24,360 Speaker 3: And remember it's a plasma discharge comet. It's not a 7 00:00:24,440 --> 00:00:28,320 Speaker 3: nice ball. It's not melting with the solar wind or something. 8 00:00:28,880 --> 00:00:32,400 Speaker 3: So what's going on. It's discharging the solar capacitor, but 9 00:00:32,640 --> 00:00:35,680 Speaker 3: at a very high rate because it's moving very fast. 10 00:00:36,840 --> 00:00:39,400 Speaker 3: So that's number one. And so it has a very 11 00:00:39,560 --> 00:00:43,280 Speaker 3: high charge. Because it's moving very fast, it has a 12 00:00:43,280 --> 00:00:47,479 Speaker 3: hard time keeping a tail. And because the material is 13 00:00:47,520 --> 00:00:50,920 Speaker 3: coming in. It's like a bus coming down the street 14 00:00:50,920 --> 00:00:53,280 Speaker 3: and everybody's trying to jump on the bus, but the 15 00:00:53,360 --> 00:00:55,680 Speaker 3: bus is going so fast you can't get on the bus. 16 00:00:56,360 --> 00:00:58,720 Speaker 3: That's what's going on with this comet. So it gains 17 00:00:58,760 --> 00:01:02,440 Speaker 3: a tail, it'll lose a tail depending on the material there. 18 00:01:03,320 --> 00:01:07,039 Speaker 3: One of the things that they've been querrying over since 19 00:01:07,200 --> 00:01:10,160 Speaker 3: the beginning July second, when this was discovered, is the 20 00:01:10,240 --> 00:01:14,400 Speaker 3: anti tail, and it is a very normal characteristic of 21 00:01:14,440 --> 00:01:18,600 Speaker 3: all comets to have a sunward spike. It's just that 22 00:01:18,680 --> 00:01:21,520 Speaker 3: you can't see it with most slow moving comets that 23 00:01:21,560 --> 00:01:25,120 Speaker 3: we see in the Solar System. One of my predictions 24 00:01:25,160 --> 00:01:28,200 Speaker 3: from nineteen seventy nine when I first started all of this, 25 00:01:29,080 --> 00:01:32,279 Speaker 3: was that comets would exhibit X rays to the sunward side, 26 00:01:32,319 --> 00:01:38,400 Speaker 3: something that in nineteen ninety six was discovered. So another 27 00:01:38,520 --> 00:01:43,520 Speaker 3: property of this comet is that it has what they're 28 00:01:43,520 --> 00:01:48,680 Speaker 3: calling non gravitational forces. It's it's not moving perfectly with 29 00:01:48,920 --> 00:01:52,960 Speaker 3: gravitational predictions, and that's because of the tail drag. So 30 00:01:53,040 --> 00:01:58,360 Speaker 3: what's going on is it's drawing in tail material and 31 00:01:58,680 --> 00:02:02,200 Speaker 3: probably it's being baked on the nucleus or this nucleus 32 00:02:02,240 --> 00:02:06,040 Speaker 3: is large enough to maintain that material gravitationally, and so 33 00:02:06,120 --> 00:02:09,440 Speaker 3: it slows the nucleus down. And so that's what they're 34 00:02:09,480 --> 00:02:13,840 Speaker 3: saying is they say that the proponents of a spaceship, 35 00:02:14,280 --> 00:02:17,519 Speaker 3: they say that the anti tail is a propulsion system 36 00:02:17,960 --> 00:02:21,160 Speaker 3: and it's making it slow down. Well, no, the anti 37 00:02:21,280 --> 00:02:25,080 Speaker 3: tail is a sunward spike. It's the electrical beam that's 38 00:02:25,080 --> 00:02:28,880 Speaker 3: coming out from the Sun. Also, it's had interactions with 39 00:02:28,960 --> 00:02:32,560 Speaker 3: the Sun. It is interacted with the Sun and the 40 00:02:32,600 --> 00:02:36,079 Speaker 3: Sun is blaring out to it. That's a normal property 41 00:02:36,080 --> 00:02:39,360 Speaker 3: of comets. We see that all the time. NASA will 42 00:02:39,400 --> 00:02:42,639 Speaker 3: not acknowledge that, and we see this on the SOHO 43 00:02:43,080 --> 00:02:46,360 Speaker 3: cameras all the time. Comets come in, they discharge with 44 00:02:46,440 --> 00:02:50,160 Speaker 3: the sun. It's a normal property of the plasma discharge, 45 00:02:50,200 --> 00:02:55,360 Speaker 3: comet doing its thing. There's a lot of other things. 46 00:02:55,760 --> 00:03:01,600 Speaker 3: For example, the idea that it's only five degrees off 47 00:03:01,639 --> 00:03:05,000 Speaker 3: the plane of the planets. Not a big deal. So 48 00:03:05,120 --> 00:03:10,720 Speaker 3: I mean has statistically going to happen. It's not something 49 00:03:10,840 --> 00:03:13,200 Speaker 3: unusual to the point where you would claim, oh, that's 50 00:03:13,240 --> 00:03:17,799 Speaker 3: an alien spaceship. That is not you know that, it's 51 00:03:17,880 --> 00:03:20,920 Speaker 3: not something that would lead you to say it's an 52 00:03:20,919 --> 00:03:26,240 Speaker 3: alien spaceship. The green color that surrounds the nucleus, it's 53 00:03:26,280 --> 00:03:29,680 Speaker 3: a halo. This is common with all comets. It's just 54 00:03:29,720 --> 00:03:32,160 Speaker 3: once again, you can't see it with all comets because 55 00:03:32,200 --> 00:03:35,560 Speaker 3: it's not that strong. But it's a Dubai shield. It's 56 00:03:35,640 --> 00:03:41,280 Speaker 3: a charged shielding mechanism that happens in the plasma environment 57 00:03:41,320 --> 00:03:45,240 Speaker 3: about space when the negatively charged nucleus. This is very 58 00:03:45,480 --> 00:03:48,600 Speaker 3: This nucleus has a very high negative charge, so it 59 00:03:48,680 --> 00:03:51,840 Speaker 3: exhibits a very bright green halo, and it's been doing 60 00:03:51,840 --> 00:03:55,480 Speaker 3: that since the beginning. That's a Dubai shield. That's part 61 00:03:55,600 --> 00:03:58,360 Speaker 3: of the process of a comet. And of course, if 62 00:03:58,360 --> 00:04:01,040 Speaker 3: you think commets are dirty snowballs, there's no reason to 63 00:04:01,080 --> 00:04:04,480 Speaker 3: see a green halo around it. So these are just 64 00:04:04,520 --> 00:04:11,000 Speaker 3: some examples of Also, this comet was once they discovered 65 00:04:11,000 --> 00:04:14,920 Speaker 3: it with the Atlas telescope system, they looked into data 66 00:04:14,960 --> 00:04:18,239 Speaker 3: from other telescopes and sure enough, there it was coming 67 00:04:18,279 --> 00:04:21,520 Speaker 3: into the Solar system. So it actually developed as a 68 00:04:21,520 --> 00:04:26,000 Speaker 3: comet way out there, which dirty snowball comets don't do. 69 00:04:26,960 --> 00:04:31,520 Speaker 3: And we've seen other comets that develop way out beyond Saturn, 70 00:04:31,600 --> 00:04:36,640 Speaker 3: some beyond Neptune and Pluto even and so there's no 71 00:04:36,760 --> 00:04:41,560 Speaker 3: sunlight out there to sublimate materials off a ic nucleus. 72 00:04:42,240 --> 00:04:45,400 Speaker 3: It's the discharge of the solar capacitor. Because we now 73 00:04:45,440 --> 00:04:48,720 Speaker 3: know that that nebular ion cloud is out in what 74 00:04:48,760 --> 00:04:51,560 Speaker 3: we call the Kuiper Belt, and that's why there are 75 00:04:51,600 --> 00:04:54,640 Speaker 3: all these thousands of planets NASA's discovering out in the 76 00:04:54,680 --> 00:04:58,680 Speaker 3: Kuiper Belt. They're forming out there in the nebular ion 77 00:04:58,720 --> 00:05:02,560 Speaker 3: cloud and you can see the around other stars. So Anyway, 78 00:05:02,640 --> 00:05:06,160 Speaker 3: the list goes on and on. You can see. One 79 00:05:06,240 --> 00:05:08,960 Speaker 3: thing I saw the other day is some data came 80 00:05:08,960 --> 00:05:14,000 Speaker 3: in from the James Webb Telescope Infrared Spectrometer showing that 81 00:05:14,240 --> 00:05:17,960 Speaker 3: they couldn't identify the elements, and that is because the 82 00:05:18,560 --> 00:05:22,440 Speaker 3: charging on the nucleus creates a red shift. That's another 83 00:05:22,480 --> 00:05:26,760 Speaker 3: theoretical aspect of my work, the induced electric dipole redshift. 84 00:05:27,360 --> 00:05:31,440 Speaker 3: So they can't identify the elements because the spectral lines 85 00:05:31,480 --> 00:05:36,800 Speaker 3: are red shifted. And once they start recognizing this, they 86 00:05:37,640 --> 00:05:41,039 Speaker 3: can move those lines back to normal and identify what 87 00:05:41,200 --> 00:05:44,200 Speaker 3: elements they're actually seeing there. So they're doing a lot 88 00:05:44,240 --> 00:05:49,000 Speaker 3: of misidentification of elements because of this red shifting away. 89 00:05:49,480 --> 00:05:54,200 Speaker 2: Back in nineteen ninety four, in July, comet shoemaker Levy 90 00:05:54,360 --> 00:05:59,760 Speaker 2: nine broke apart and crashed into Jupiter. Is that unusual 91 00:06:00,200 --> 00:06:01,280 Speaker 2: hit a planet like that? 92 00:06:02,080 --> 00:06:05,479 Speaker 3: Well, yeah, it's the first time we've really seen a 93 00:06:05,560 --> 00:06:09,599 Speaker 3: comet in that case, twenty one pieces of a comet 94 00:06:09,760 --> 00:06:15,040 Speaker 3: hit a planet, and we've seen little chunks of things 95 00:06:15,120 --> 00:06:18,320 Speaker 3: hit Earth. We've seen things hit the Moon. But that 96 00:06:18,520 --> 00:06:22,240 Speaker 3: was a spectacular event and I was actually part of that. 97 00:06:22,360 --> 00:06:26,360 Speaker 3: I was working with the Russian scientists in Nova Sebiska 98 00:06:26,400 --> 00:06:31,080 Speaker 3: at that point, the University of nover Sibersk, Alexander Touttanov 99 00:06:31,200 --> 00:06:38,719 Speaker 3: and Alexei Dmitri, Dmitri and the crew there, and they 100 00:06:38,760 --> 00:06:42,160 Speaker 3: pointed all of their equipment on that comet because they 101 00:06:42,240 --> 00:06:46,720 Speaker 3: knew it would discharge the capacitor around Jupiter, and NASA 102 00:06:46,800 --> 00:06:49,960 Speaker 3: didn't even point a telescope at it. They said, these 103 00:06:49,960 --> 00:06:52,120 Speaker 3: are little snowballs. They are just going to burrow into 104 00:06:52,160 --> 00:06:55,440 Speaker 3: the atmosphere and we're not going to see anything. And 105 00:06:55,480 --> 00:06:59,159 Speaker 3: so thank goodness, the Russians had all their equipment trained 106 00:06:59,200 --> 00:07:02,480 Speaker 3: on that and when those pieces, first of all, they 107 00:07:02,600 --> 00:07:06,520 Speaker 3: changed from water comets to sulfur dioxide comets because that's 108 00:07:06,600 --> 00:07:10,920 Speaker 3: the local chemical species and the environment of Jupiter. And 109 00:07:11,000 --> 00:07:14,040 Speaker 3: then when they hit before they even hit Jupiter, they 110 00:07:14,560 --> 00:07:19,040 Speaker 3: exploded because of the electrical discharge. And this was on 111 00:07:19,080 --> 00:07:22,600 Speaker 3: the backside of Jupiter. So what the Russians detected was 112 00:07:22,880 --> 00:07:26,240 Speaker 3: X rays that were reflected off the moons which were 113 00:07:26,320 --> 00:07:29,560 Speaker 3: behind Jupiter at the time, and from that they could 114 00:07:29,600 --> 00:07:32,960 Speaker 3: calculate the amount of energy and the explosions of these 115 00:07:33,000 --> 00:07:36,920 Speaker 3: twenty one pieces, and any one of those pieces exploded 116 00:07:36,960 --> 00:07:39,360 Speaker 3: with more energy than all the nuclear bombs on Earth 117 00:07:39,360 --> 00:07:44,960 Speaker 3: put together, certainly not an ice ball. So yeah, that 118 00:07:45,240 --> 00:07:48,720 Speaker 3: was a huge event. And the Russians came out after 119 00:07:48,760 --> 00:07:52,840 Speaker 3: that and they said that definitely my theoretical work was correct. 120 00:07:54,160 --> 00:07:56,720 Speaker 3: Back then they were seeing the tornadoes on the Sun 121 00:07:57,600 --> 00:08:02,680 Speaker 3: and my theoretical work plane, but those were we were 122 00:08:02,720 --> 00:08:08,240 Speaker 3: working on how to manage and control hurricanes, which is 123 00:08:08,240 --> 00:08:13,239 Speaker 3: a cyclonic, very similar cyclonic electrically driven storm on Earth. 124 00:08:13,800 --> 00:08:18,400 Speaker 3: But yeah, Schumacher Levy nine was a major celestial event. 125 00:08:19,440 --> 00:08:22,320 Speaker 2: Now, what are the odds of three iadlas smacking into 126 00:08:22,360 --> 00:08:24,800 Speaker 2: something as it makes its turn around the Sun and 127 00:08:24,880 --> 00:08:25,640 Speaker 2: does its thing. 128 00:08:26,360 --> 00:08:30,280 Speaker 3: Well, probably the closest that came to anything would be Mars. 129 00:08:31,520 --> 00:08:34,640 Speaker 3: It had a very direct alignment. And interestingly enough, this 130 00:08:34,720 --> 00:08:37,280 Speaker 3: is when NASA shut down. We were supposed to have 131 00:08:37,320 --> 00:08:40,160 Speaker 3: all this grandiose pictures and data and the James Webb 132 00:08:40,200 --> 00:08:44,680 Speaker 3: telescope in the Hubble, and they shut it down. And 133 00:08:44,720 --> 00:08:48,720 Speaker 3: I'm sure that that comment was discharging to Mars like 134 00:08:48,800 --> 00:08:52,920 Speaker 3: Johnny Begod, there's something they didn't want anybody to see. 135 00:08:53,679 --> 00:09:00,480 Speaker 3: In fact, now that the now that the bug has 136 00:09:00,520 --> 00:09:04,080 Speaker 3: been signed, NASA supposed to open up and release all 137 00:09:04,120 --> 00:09:07,240 Speaker 3: its photographs, and that's why I postponed the release of 138 00:09:07,280 --> 00:09:10,920 Speaker 3: my book till Tuesday, is to give them a few 139 00:09:11,000 --> 00:09:16,920 Speaker 3: days to release this information. But I'm not real I'm 140 00:09:16,960 --> 00:09:19,320 Speaker 3: not real confident. Let's put it that way. They're going 141 00:09:19,400 --> 00:09:25,200 Speaker 3: to release real data because at Mars there was probably 142 00:09:25,240 --> 00:09:28,280 Speaker 3: a lot of electrical activity between the comet and Mars. 143 00:09:30,000 --> 00:09:32,440 Speaker 2: Where do you think this comment originated from in the 144 00:09:32,480 --> 00:09:35,960 Speaker 2: first place, Well, it's coming in at high speed. 145 00:09:36,000 --> 00:09:40,520 Speaker 3: I think. Here's the deal. We have equipment now like 146 00:09:40,559 --> 00:09:44,720 Speaker 3: the Atlas and other automated search engines that discover these. 147 00:09:44,800 --> 00:09:48,360 Speaker 3: Remember that probably ten other telescopes saw this in their data, 148 00:09:49,080 --> 00:09:52,520 Speaker 3: but they didn't realize that it was not captured, it 149 00:09:52,559 --> 00:09:58,200 Speaker 3: was not identified. So when Atlas finally discovered this the 150 00:09:58,240 --> 00:10:01,559 Speaker 3: automated system, they went back in other telescopes and sure 151 00:10:01,640 --> 00:10:04,080 Speaker 3: enough it was there. So I think what's going on 152 00:10:04,240 --> 00:10:06,640 Speaker 3: is more and more we're going to be seeing these 153 00:10:06,720 --> 00:10:11,120 Speaker 3: types of interstellar objects. They're probably ten of them rushing 154 00:10:11,120 --> 00:10:13,960 Speaker 3: through the Solar System at any given time, and with 155 00:10:14,080 --> 00:10:16,400 Speaker 3: better equipment, we're going to see more and more of them. 156 00:10:17,280 --> 00:10:19,560 Speaker 2: Should we be concerned that we're going to get smacked 157 00:10:19,559 --> 00:10:21,959 Speaker 2: by one of them? 158 00:10:22,240 --> 00:10:24,960 Speaker 3: You know, space is a big place. It's a very 159 00:10:24,960 --> 00:10:32,360 Speaker 3: big place. And so I think that you know, we 160 00:10:32,480 --> 00:10:36,240 Speaker 3: have had some major events on planet Earth. And one 161 00:10:36,280 --> 00:10:39,520 Speaker 3: thing I'm working with a group in the background is 162 00:10:39,559 --> 00:10:44,040 Speaker 3: to try and mitigate this type of thing, large comets 163 00:10:44,120 --> 00:10:48,960 Speaker 3: or asteroids hitting Earth. We have a asteroid mitigation project. 164 00:10:49,920 --> 00:10:54,240 Speaker 3: It's in the background. So, I mean, space is one 165 00:10:54,240 --> 00:10:59,960 Speaker 3: of our major obstacles in generating or giving a society moving, 166 00:11:00,080 --> 00:11:07,880 Speaker 3: besides you know, destroying ourselves with stupidity. But uh, the 167 00:11:07,880 --> 00:11:12,959 Speaker 3: the ancient Egyptian cults when the when the Greeks first 168 00:11:13,000 --> 00:11:17,000 Speaker 3: went back after they started developing, Solon went back and 169 00:11:17,040 --> 00:11:20,360 Speaker 3: asked the Egyptian priests cults, and they said, you don't 170 00:11:20,400 --> 00:11:25,320 Speaker 3: realize your history, but they and that's where the concept 171 00:11:25,320 --> 00:11:28,960 Speaker 3: of Atlantis came from. They said that we've had five 172 00:11:29,120 --> 00:11:33,400 Speaker 3: major destructive events from the sky over the past ten 173 00:11:33,480 --> 00:11:36,160 Speaker 3: thousand years, and I'm sure one of them was the 174 00:11:36,200 --> 00:11:40,000 Speaker 3: Noah's Blood the other one was the Venus event. And 175 00:11:40,480 --> 00:11:42,880 Speaker 3: they talked about five of them. So they'd get their 176 00:11:42,920 --> 00:11:45,680 Speaker 3: culture up and going and whamp, one of these event 177 00:11:45,840 --> 00:11:49,360 Speaker 3: events from outer space would level them. And of course 178 00:11:49,400 --> 00:11:54,000 Speaker 3: we can see that in the in the Archaeologue archaeological record. 179 00:11:54,400 --> 00:12:01,320 Speaker 3: We see devastation the whole world, and you know, you 180 00:12:01,360 --> 00:12:05,960 Speaker 3: can dig down one hundred feet and biden civilizations that 181 00:12:06,040 --> 00:12:08,920 Speaker 3: were buried for who knows how long, you know. So 182 00:12:10,440 --> 00:12:14,439 Speaker 3: it's a real issue. There's nothing that we don't have 183 00:12:14,559 --> 00:12:19,640 Speaker 3: right now that's a game changer. But to be a 184 00:12:19,679 --> 00:12:22,240 Speaker 3: long term player in the cosmos, we have to learn 185 00:12:22,320 --> 00:12:26,800 Speaker 3: how to manage these these disastrous events from outer space. 186 00:12:27,760 --> 00:12:32,120 Speaker 2: You mentioned the AI stuff on YouTube. What's the motivation 187 00:12:32,440 --> 00:12:37,360 Speaker 2: James for that? Why create these phony videos? What do 188 00:12:37,440 --> 00:12:38,200 Speaker 2: they get out of it? 189 00:12:38,840 --> 00:12:41,400 Speaker 3: I don't know, because you know, you look at the 190 00:12:41,440 --> 00:12:44,319 Speaker 3: comments and a lot of people are laughing at them 191 00:12:44,640 --> 00:12:48,720 Speaker 3: because they're you know, they're the Many of the comments 192 00:12:49,360 --> 00:12:54,200 Speaker 3: are ridiculing these videos. But I think, my after looking 193 00:12:54,280 --> 00:12:55,959 Speaker 3: at it, I think what they're doing right now is 194 00:12:56,040 --> 00:13:00,840 Speaker 3: just planting the seed in everybody's brain. Comets, aliens and 195 00:13:02,520 --> 00:13:06,280 Speaker 3: if there's an event, because they have events, they can 196 00:13:06,280 --> 00:13:09,679 Speaker 3: pull out of a rabbit hat, and so they if 197 00:13:09,720 --> 00:13:12,040 Speaker 3: they can say shut down the power grid, which all 198 00:13:12,040 --> 00:13:15,360 Speaker 3: they gotta do is pull a plug. If everybody's without power, 199 00:13:15,360 --> 00:13:18,280 Speaker 3: and the only information they get is from this emergency 200 00:13:18,360 --> 00:13:24,120 Speaker 3: cell phone, you warning system, that's in place. I think 201 00:13:24,160 --> 00:13:26,800 Speaker 3: they could control it pretty well and claim there's an 202 00:13:26,840 --> 00:13:31,400 Speaker 3: alien invasion. We have to in fact, this has already happened. 203 00:13:32,000 --> 00:13:35,320 Speaker 3: Where they're saying NASA is working with other countries to 204 00:13:35,480 --> 00:13:38,720 Speaker 3: have an alliance to go out and talk to the aliens. 205 00:13:38,800 --> 00:13:43,240 Speaker 3: This is already showing up in these videos. So I 206 00:13:43,280 --> 00:13:46,880 Speaker 3: think the idea is just to get the word out 207 00:13:46,920 --> 00:13:49,439 Speaker 3: there so everybody has it in the back of their brain. 208 00:13:49,800 --> 00:13:54,120 Speaker 3: Not that they're convincing people. Even the news story is 209 00:13:54,160 --> 00:13:58,440 Speaker 3: where they're talking negatively about the alien aspect, they're still 210 00:13:58,440 --> 00:14:00,000 Speaker 3: putting the seat in everybody's brain. 211 00:14:01,679 --> 00:14:04,920 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 212 00:14:04,960 --> 00:14:08,200 Speaker 1: one a m. Eastern and go to Coast tocoastam dot 213 00:14:08,240 --> 00:14:09,000 Speaker 1: com for more