UAP “Hearing” 20250501 – Understanding UAP Transcripts

Understanding UAP: Science, National Security & Innovation (House Oversight and Accountability)
UAPDF ReReleased Audio YouTube Transcript
Opening Remarks & Panel Overview
Rep. Luna on Transparency Efforts & Upcoming Hearings
Rep. Burlison on Bipartisan Support & Witness Courage
Rep. Burchett on the Cover-Up & Living in the Shadows
Moderator Lue Elizondo: Introductions & Event Framing
Dr. Davis: Secrecy, Industry Involvement & Lack of Oversight
Dr. Davis: Briefing David Grusch & Legacy Programs
Dr. Davis: Recovered Craft are ‘Not of this Earth’
Dr. Davis: Explaining ‘Exotic’ Materials – Fabrication is Key
Rep. Burlison Q: Physics of UAP Propulsion & Materials
Dr. Davis & Dr. Loeb Discuss Propulsion Physics (Warp Drives, Negative Energy)
Dr. Davis on Energy Requirements (Nimitz Incident Example)
Dr. Davis on NHI Species Descriptions & Craft Crews
Transition to National Security Panel
Elizondo Presents Unreleased Civilian Pilot UAP Photo (Four Corners)
Introducing Chris Mellon & Kirk McConnell (National Security Panel)
Chris Mellon: Shocking Airspace Vulnerabilities & Sensor Failures
Chris Mellon: Strategic Sensor Blind Spots (Sparrs, GEODSS, SBIRS)
Chris Mellon: Drone Intrusions Over Sensitive Sites (Langley, Guam, Palo Verde)
Chris Mellon: Overclassification Issues & Lack of Transparency
Kirk McConnell on Congressional Challenges & Whistleblower Protection
Consequences of Congressional Inaction on UAP
Chris Mellon on Retroactive Classification Dangers
Kirk McConnell: How Congress Can Better Protect Whistleblowers
Transition to Science & Innovation Panel
Introducing Mike Gold & Anna Brady-Estevez (Science & Innovation Panel)
Mike Gold: Microgravity’s Impact on Innovation (Biotech, Pharma, Materials)
Mike Gold: Leveraging NASA Archives & Addressing Lunar Anomalies
Mike Gold: The Need for Advanced Propulsion & The Alcubierre Warp Drive
Mike Gold: Risk of Falling Behind China in UAP-Related Tech
Anna Brady-Estevez: Deep Tech Investment, UAP Adjacent Innovation & Inter-Agency Work
Anna Brady-Estevez: Funding UAP-Inspired Tech & The Need to Build
Anna Brady-Estevez: Sources & Methods – From Protocols to Prayer
Anna Brady-Estevez on Space-Time Manipulation & NSF’s Role
Mike Gold on NASA UAP Study Recommendations & Reporting Systems (ASRS)
Lue Elizondo: Closing Thoughts & Call to Action
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“Enhanced” Audio YouTube Transcript Part One
i appreciate actually read your book directly so appreciate you for being here as well and all your hard work um
as you know up in Silverly the last congress I think it was representative Bett that was actually weeding out the
uh investigation solely on his own so credit towards bizar Mr burchett’s been
really I think out this fight we do have an opportunity right now where we are seeing not just a complete and a
complete push for transparency out of the current administration on this topic but also to we have bicameal and
bicartson support on this so uh thank you very much Lou for your help and then also to the experts and people being
here today to testify to really to tell us and help meet us out with us again this is a community
effort this is not just you know Democrat Republican even just an American thing right there’s a massive push for this for good reason we know
recently in working with the National Archives they were able to actually update on the archives website all
things UAP there will continue to be documents scanned and updated and beyond that tap you citizen journalists can
actually go forward do the research yourself help us ask the tough questions and then I can also tell you that we
have posted dates for the next UAP hearing we are going to be doing two one is going to be government focused we are
asking u various appointees i don’t want to release the names yet but we add they get a good response on that we will make
those yays known soon as well as uh military and or former military that
will be coming forward also to note that we were told uh by one of uh Mr berles’s
staffers that’s helping us to lead out this investigation about someone that wants to come in regards to a crash achievement program and so that’s pretty
interesting to hear someone going on record about that obviously we’ve had a lot of people try to dispel the research
that the UAP community has done and so we’re just simply cutting out the fast letting the media recusal really the
world decide to sauce uh but I’d also like to pass a music so Representative
Brettson thank you Anna uh I first want to just say thank you again to Tim uh for
leading the charge on this when it wasn’t when it wasn’t popular it was uh
difficult and took a lot of courage and and we all recognize that i just wanted to acknowledge that and I want to say
thank you to Anna for her leadership and I’ll tell you she is amazing to work with she is very humble in her attitude
and her approach she doesn’t uh she likes to you know to to let people other
people join in the credit and she is a very gracious uh and good leer in this
task force i want to say thank you to everyone that has come board you know
from Lou to Mr melly to Mr grush and
others that have taken bas Mr gray suits here uh who’ve done taken a bold step
and and you know at the risk of their reputation and their career there’s a
lot of people that sacrificed their career in order to get get information out to the American people and we are
grateful for as well for the cooperation that we’re getting with Tulsi Gabbard um
and whose director’s initiatives group is actively harmonizing classification guides to facilitate responsible
releases she been she’d been very effective with the JFK assassination records and others and then uh the other
last thing I want to say is that this is not of a one-time thing this will not be it’s clear that this is not a one-time
data dub this is this is a systemic change to the process in the way that we
are transparent with the American people and that working on legislation that
will that will put that in practice and again thank you for everyone for being here i’m looking forward to today’s
hearing thank y’all for being here i’ll be very
brief lou thank you for the introduction thank my colleagues up here to recount words i’m not sure what that’s all
about think I’m buying pieces after this thing you’re crazy i got a dart that
rides horses how how are we getting home
today but it is a pleasure being here and I want to thank the people that are that are sitting right there some dear
friends of mine people under media and the elders they’re always kind to me we
don’t agree on a backd thing but we do agree that this is the biggest comfort
for our lock and we need to dip to the bottom of it and I would fel folks to
know out there that we believe for so many years people that
believe like we do and they live in sh and when you bring it up you get
criticized and people uh say all kinds of awful things about you damn I’m over
that we know this thing’s covered up and it we’re going to blow the damn lit off
of it so thank y’all for being here let’s get
on what I’d like to do is uh because uh time is precious especially for the members obviously they have a real job
to do uh this is part of it but they have a whole lot of other responsibilities so with that said I’d like to first begin by thanking
specifically representative Luna from the 13th district if I’m not mistaken for it uh from her leadership uh on this
particular in this particular forum and on this topic this would not be possible if it was not for representative Luna in
her pursuit of the truth she has a uh she has served her country uh quite
honorably and her husband as well if any of you been in the military they brought across him so on behalf of a very
grateful nation ma’am thank you for what you continue to do your continued service to this nation and that of your family it is greatly appreciated in your
service specifically as well with regard to the moment so thank you um the second I’d like to thank um Representative
Pearlson um somewhat newer to this topic than some of the other folks maybe on the Senate side and even the House side
who has also championed truth and transparency within the American government i would refer to him as a
healthy skeptic uh which I think was important always keep you an open mind about the day to speak for herself and
in my interactions with represent Brosman I have seen him to be every time and exclusively honorable and truthful
and he is now uh I think it’s translate into the form you see here with media
present we’re going to have a very interesting conversation today and again this is only possible because of the
three individuals up here so uh if you have time later on I be I would suggest
you you give head mayor a good deal of thanks for what he is doing for our mush and last but certainly not least is
representative Tim from Tennessee who has been spearheading this topic for
quite some time at great personal risk to his political career as most of you know um that’s one thing that
politicians tend to avoid is risk uh especially when it comes to election
time and uh Representative Brashette I would uh I would probably define him as
um bringing a working man’s perspectives and common sense perspective to the bureaucracy we call Washington DC
certainly a breath of fresh air and um a champion for again truth and
transparency for for our government and for our institutions so with that said I’d like to offer a quick round of
applause for that
secondly I’d like to thank the studio panelists that are with us here today can you all hear you okay in the back
okay I can adjust your m I can use my drill sergeant voice if I need to um we’re going to have uh three separate
sections with panelists uh with Stringer Steve Falbr i am not sure there’s ever been
assembled a panel like this in front of the American people and I I don’t say
that lightly because I’ve been part of a lot of leads a lot a lot of sensitive beings both in the intelligence community and within a national security
apparatus uh we have elements and from academia elements from the scientific
community elements from the national security elements from the intelligence
community um all speaking here today to you about what they know regarding the
UAP topic um the assembly here is is
dare I say possibly even historic i’m truly honored to be with you here today i will be your moderator real quick
reminder for our palace um I’d like to when you ask a question try to keep it within try to keep it within three
minutes eric um if you go beyond that I might have to
kind of get the conversation um directed to some other questions because we do have a lot of panelists and uh I also
have a tendency to to talk a lot so I’m going to try to keep myself in check as well um but panelist try to keep your
responses to three minutes some panelists have for you a presentation so for those who go to presentation we’ll
do the presentation first and then we’ll be followed up with questions and of course esteemed members of Congress if
you have any question at the time please feel free to ask them and we will uh we will certainly have our panelists
address those questions for you uh one more reminder um again the security
reminder I know I said it before but for anybody who’s come in here uh after uh I’m going to be asking questions some of
those will be very pointed questions for those of you who have a security clearance or who have held a security
clearance I ask that you please be mindful that this is an unclassified venue and not to discuss classified
information um for the record none of us look good in an orange jumpsuit certainly I don’t so you want to be
mindful of that and I’d also like to thank the media uh thank each and every one of you for being here i know this is
a topic that for quite some time was fraught with stigma and taboo and this would have been considered career suicide for any respectable journalist
to cover this topic just like it is for for politicians uh and are elective
leaders of this nation and uh times are changing times are changing because of you so I want to I want to do a hearty
thank you to the members of media that are covering this and last but not least and probably perhaps most important I
would like to thank each and every one of you in the audience each and every one of you that’s tuning in each and every one of you that’s watching this
each and every one of you that might be sitting on your sofa at home or around a dinner table that are interested in this
topic and have asked questions um this is because of you our elected officials
put this on because of you not me and not even our esteemed desks because of
you and that should tell you something that means democracy is working folks that means transparency is working that
means we the people agree and that’s a lot that’s that’s profound this is
democracy in action and you’re watching it so I want to thank each and every one of you and I also want to thank you
quick the staff here in on Hill that put this help put this together and coordinate this i know it’s a bit of a
zoo uh but thank you so much for for being patient with us and helping us with the audio visual and the media and
the seating and it is very much appreciated so with that um let’s go
ahead and begin shall we so I would like to introduce uh the
first of our panelists here is Dr abby Loba now bear with me because he has his
academic vite it’s probably about 10 pages long so I’m going to just try to truncate a little bit so Dr abu Loba is
a PhD uh professor of science at Harvard University he is also the head of the
Galileo project he is also the founding director of Harvard Black Hole
Initiative he’s a contributor to Arrow uh he is also a trained
astrophysicist let’s see if we can get this right director of the flight
institute for theory dire institute for theory and
computation um and a former member of the president’s council on science and
technology so think about that for a minute right if I wasing a president
um former chair of the board of physics and uh astronomy of the
nationalmies and uh also author of eight books and over 1,000 scientific papers and he is geared
before you today by the way none of our panelists are deemed paid everybody’s doing this um out of their own kindness
of their own heart the second panelist uh we have here is rear Tim Gudet for
those of you who served in in the Navy know how hard it is to achieve the rank of Admal that is no easy feat uh he’s
also former acting administrator of the National Ocean Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration aka Noah former
oceanographer for the Navy a advisory board member of the UAPDF folks here that are helping make
this happen um but I’ll tell you something else about about Tim tim also
happened to be one of uh the Navy officers that was present
and privy during the Roosevelt incidences uh the Roosevelt is why I say
pearl because there are many of these UAP incidents that the USS Roosevelt encountered in the 2013 2014 time frame
when she was conducting military operations in the uh support the global
war to her and so Admiral Gaudette I would I would consider uh indirectly a
witness to some degree of some of the dysfunction that the bureaucracy had
overlaid on some of our servicemen at the end of it in uniform reporting
UAP and certainly last but not least is Dr eric Davis uh not only colleague but
a friend and in some cases even a mentor uh he is a theoretical and applied
physicist senior science adviser at Earth 10 former researcher at the aerospace
corporation and now those are just some of those let me tell you who he really is dr eric Davis was one of our senior
scientists during my tenure at the advanced aerospace and threat identification program and OAF as well
uh he was one of our chief chief scientists and by the way he was also part of other legacy efforts before that
working with elements of the US government and I think what you’re going to find him have to say today is going
to be very compelling um he’s an honorable man he has served his country
time and time again in some cases uh at great personal expense professional and personally to himself
uh and probably one of the smartest individuals I’ve ever had the honor privilege to and my life to work with
um if you got a chance I’d shake his hand because I would consider him like the rest of these gentlemen national
treasure and I think like I said what what he’s going to tell you today is going to be very interesting so this is
why I do the reminder three minutes because even myself I would love to just let him roll for about three
hours um so with that said I think we have a presentation we’re going to present first by Dr abby Lopes so if we
could just give him a quick round of
applause thank you so much it’s a great pleasure to be here let us be honest there are objects
in the sky that we don’t understand that’s not the first time
that we don’t understand something you know our knowledge scientific knowledge is an island in an ocean of ignorance
we don’t know what n what 85% of matter in the universe is we call it dark
matter but we invest billions of dollars figuring it out over the past
half century we haven’t yet figured it out my point is simple we should invest
a billion dollars in figuring out what is in our sky and that means developing artificial
intelligence algorithms software that would help us analyze data
from state-of-the-art sensors
and in one case if all of these objects are produced by
humans the defense department will have a new tool to monitor what’s out there
in the sky it’s important for national security however if one out of a million
objects came from outside the solar system the person who finds that object
will get the Nobel Prize it’s a winwin situation we need to invest a billion
dollars in this task and I will mention a few details of
what we can do with it this is a subject that the public cares
a lot about and so it’s one of the unusual opportunities to invest a
billion dollars in science and technology that will make all taxpayers
happy if you were to ask them do they care more about what dark matter is or
whether we have a neighbor that is intelligent from which we can learn they would tell you it’s the
second question that they want the billion dollars to be spent on so to make taxpayers happy let’s invest the
money and if we don’t find any technological relics from other
civilizations this would be a very precious defense system for our country
so I will show a few um slides describing what we have been doing over the past few years in the project that
I’m leading at Harvard University the Galo project what you see in the first
slide is a title of an article appeared in New York Times
magazine and I was not happy with the content i contacted the editor and said
“If this is the way you described science how can I believe anything you
say about politics that’s a good thing
we can leave now you already care.” Now Enrico Fermy 1950 had lunch at Los
Alamos and in his Italian accent he asked “Where is everybody?” And that’s a
question that every lonely person asks and what you tell a lonely person is
don’t be presumptuous your partner will not come to you you are not that attractive you have to go to dating
sites and and Rico Fermy didn’t even build a telescope to look out didn’t
have cameras to check and so saying where is everybody is arrogant
and many of my colleagues in academia argue extraordinary claims require
extraordinary evidence if you read the news you would
conclude that we are not extraordinary there is room for improvement and imagining something like
us on a planet that has similar conditions to Earth is not an extraordinary claim it’s just an
ordinary claim to say under similar circumstances you will get life and eventually intelligent life and most
stars in the Milky Way galaxy 100 billion of them formed billions of years
before the sun so we are late for the party they may have been before us so
it’s an ordinary claim that requires ordinary evidence
when people make this statement they also imply that we should not invest any funds in searching for
them and without seeking evidence how can we find them it’s a self-fulfilling
prophecy so my point is that in within the scientific community innovation is
suppressed by people who assume the answer in advance i when I was a kid I
was most frustrated by the adults in the room because I would ask them a question and they would pretend to know the
answer and the one reason I became a scientist is because I don’t care what
other people say i don’t care how many likes I get i just want to figure out the answer based on evidence that’s the
way detective works we shouldn’t assume anything but if we don’t collect
data we will never find anything
new now another important point is new scientific knowledge doesn’t fall into
our lab to find the gigs boson the CERN invested 10 billion dollars in
the large manga to find the first generation of stars and galaxies in the universe the
scientific version of the story the biblical story of Genesis we had to invest $10 billion to
use a web i was born not to be in the third and by the
design the next generation we go my point is in order something you do
need resources time and effort it takes a lot of work you cannot just sit on
your chair and figure out the answer the way most people
do and just just to give you an example you know we are familiar with objects
that have a positive mass we are also aware that the universe
is not just expanding but its expansion is accelerating so we see evidence for
it because if we have
access just like if you
put a mass to the
object and you won’t need any fuel move around so that they look at Starship our
best rocket Whoever has an access to a negative mass would would laugh at it we
are putting most of the mass in the fuel of the rocket it’s a huge gigantic thing
and if they had access to a negative mass that would not be necessary you would just use the payload plus a heavy
mass that balances it just to give an example of something beyond our knowledge if negative masses exist or
not we don’t know if you can bottle this dark energy that fills up the universe
thank you now the Galilo project at Harvard
University was established a few years ago and that it followed the first
report from the office of the director of national intelligence to Congress and uh I suggested also to NASA
just around that time that they should look into that uh this is a subject
where the intelligence agency cannot really make a lot of progress on because
the data is limited so why not build observatories monitoring the sky the sky is not classified astronomers have been
looking at the sky for a while the oceans are not classified we just need sensors and then analyzing the data with
the state-ofthe-art AI software that’s all we need so this was not happening and
you know I’m sort of I’m not happy with looking at past reports because when you
look at past reports you have very limited data and you can’t make a lot of progress if the data is fuzzy you can’t
really get it to be crispier but if you have a working observatory that monitors the sky all the time or the oceans and
you see something unusual you could try and collect better data and
therefore I always say the best is yet to come if we were curious enough and
that’s what we should be we can collect data forget about the hundreds of reports from the past and have a
collection of millions of objects that we look at that’s what the Galileo project is about
and in the future we can get very good data with equipment that was never tried
before because astronomers usually focus on a small part of the sky and look at things that are far away they ignore
objects flying overhead and the Gerilo project has developed an observatory at
Harvard University first that monitors the sky in the infrared optical radio and audio and as
of now we are actually doing triangulation we have multiple units that look at the same object from
different directions so that we can figure out the distance the velocity the acceleration of the object that’s
extremely important and we are building additional observatories
uh one in Pennsylvania another one in Nevada hopefully by the end of the
summer we’ll have three observatories collecting data on a few million objects
every year and I say even even if one in a million is of extraterrestrial origin
that would be the biggest discovery that humanity ever made it would mean that we have a partner we shouldn’t assume
anything about the neighbor but it would be useful to
figure out what they are capable of because we can do better
they’re probably more advanced than we are if they reached our backyard before we reached their
backyard so we collected data on many uh
by now millions of of objects we analyzed it and obviously we are happy to share
the data with whoever is interested but also over the past decade
the first objects from outside the solar system were discovered for the first time by
astronomers there were three of them the first was identified by US
government satellites that are monitoring the earth for any ballistic missiles being launched by adversarial
nations and in 2014 they noticed an object that
collided with Earth and exploded with a fireball that released 1% of the
Hiroshima atomic bomb energy and they decided it’s not
humanmade and therefore it can be shared with astronomy community so NASA
published a catalog of all these meteors over the past decade and uh one of them
was this one we looked at the catalog and uncovered it and realized that it came from outside the solar system
because it was moving very fast it was moving faster than 95% of the stars in
the vicinity of the sun outside the solar system and so the question is was
it a Voyager like probe because it’s moving so
fast or maybe just a rock from another star that was the first one and then the
second one in 2017 was a much bigger object the first one was half a meter in
size the second one was the size of a football field it didn’t collide with Earth it would have been catastrophic if
it did because it would have killed us all but it passed near Earth within a
sixth of the Earth sun separation it was observed by a telescope in Hawaii
monitoring near Earth objects because we are all afraid of what happened to the
dinosaurs right we don’t want to have the same fate and um they realized this
object is moving too fast to be bound by gravity to the sun and they called it omua mua which means
a scout in the Hawaiian language now this object at first was
thought to be a comet but there was no cometary tail around it no gas or
dust and then it exhibited an excess push away from the
sun without any rocket effect of acting on it and
moreover it was it had a very extreme shape most likely flat like a disc based
on the reflection of sunlight the amount of sunlight reflected from it changed by a factor of 10 every 8 hours as it was
stumbling very unusual object so it wasn’t clear it’s not an
asteroid it’s not a comet what is it and I suggested well maybe it’s a space
trash an an empty trash bag from another civilization
so that was 2017 and then
oops and then there was oops I’m not sure okay then there was a
comet which looked just like the comets that we are familiar with in 2019 also
came from outside the solar system based on its speed and my colleagues said well
this one looks familiar so doesn’t it convince you that the others are also natural and And I said well if you go
down the street and you see a weird person and after that you see a normal person it doesn’t make the weird person
normal so um Mua Mua was really strange most
likely flat and then it’s not clear what it was
i suggested maybe it’s a very thin object pushed by sunlight reflecting
sunlight and in fact a lot of technological debris that we produced is being pushed by reflecting
sunlight in
fact I’m not sure why okay in fact the the space trash that we produce on
January 2nd 2025 just this year an amateur astronomer noticed an object
passing near Earth and it was cataloged as a near Earth
asteroid 17 hours later it was realized oh this object moves exactly the same
way as the Tesla Roadster car that was moed by SpaceX in 2018 elon Musk
It is the It is a car it’s not It’s not an asteroid they removed it from the
catalog and I actually have a bet with Elon
i am willing to put 1% of my net worth against 1% of his
network to search to check if there is any other space
entrepreneur who is more accomplished than he is since the beat back 13.8
billion years ago let’s figure it out it’s not a lot of money for him
and then uh actually in 2020 there was the same telescope in Hawaii deep that discovered the wua discovered another
object that was pushed by reflecting sunlight and then after a few weeks the astronomers realized oh that’s a rocket
booster from a 1966 launch by NASA so we know that some of the objects
that are unusual being pushed by sunlight are humanmade the question is
who produced omua
mua and my point is that the next copernican revolution remember copernicus realized
we are not the physical center of the universe i actually visited Poland
uh a year ago uh a day after visiting the Munich Security Conference where I spoke as the first
astrophysicist that ever by the way I saw on the roof of the hotel at the
Munich Security Conference there were snipers with the black head covers they were there to protect the politicians i
realized being an astrophysicist is really very fortunate but nobody wants to kill
me but then at any event it’s
overrated um the next copernican revolution is that we are not at the
technological center of the universe we have something to learn from a smarter
kid on our cosmic block and I wrote a paper a couple of months
ago where uh I explained that with a space telescope we can actually go
through the million objects roughly meter in size within the orbit
of the earth around the sun that came from outside the solar system and figure out whether among them among all the
rocks there is space trash from other civilizations because over the past
billions of years they predated us and they pollute do that in test space because we sent out five probes voyager
1 Voyager 2 Pioneer 10 Pioneer 11 and New Horizons they’re heading out of the
solar system towards interstellar space we did it over 50 years just think how many more we would produce in the next
billion years uh and all of that keeps accumulating like plastics in the ocean
all of this trash produced by other civilizations and we just have to look in our backyard
and figure it out again a billion dollars will go a long way in this
direction but right now this subject is outside the mainstream of astronomy
instead the the highest priority defined by the Decalo survey is to to to spend
more than $10 billion in the search for microbes for the molecular fingerprints
of microbes in the atmospheres of exoplanets and frankly I’m much more
excited about finding intelligence than finding microbes for a
simple reason that we can learn from a higher level of intelligence one reason I seek intelligence in interstellar
space is because I don’t often find it here on
Earth and you may ask where is where will Voyager be in a billion
years it would be on the opposite side of the Milky Way galaxy so if most stars
formed billions of years before the sun we know that for a fact they had I mean there were
civilizations like us out there they had plenty of time for their spacecraft to
reach us and we haven’t really checked until the last decade we didn’t really know about interstellar objects so I’m
saying this is new now the meteor the object that collided with Earth was interesting because for a cost of $1.5
million that I received uh from a donor we were able to go to the Pacific Ocean
and search for materials left over from this interstellar object it exploded only 20 km above the surface of the
ocean and uh that implied that it had material strength tougher than all other
hundreds of meteors in the NASA catalog so it was unusual in its material
strength in its speed and the question was could it be a Voyager
Lab Meteor could it be a Tesla car like Meteor because that car actually will
collide with Earth probably in several tens of millions spheres and my colleagues if there are if there are any
astronomers at that time they might argue it’s a rock of a type that we’ve never seen
before so actually the US space command looked back at the
data after I reached them through the white house and uh they confirmed yes
this meteor actually came from outside the solar system the data was reliable
and they also released uh the light curve of the explosion that indicated how much energy was released
and at what altitude was the explosion and so I decided to lead an
expedition to the Pacific Ocean we went there uh slightly less than two years
ago and what you see here is the deck of the ship that was fittingly called
Silver Star uh we built a sled with magnets on both sides and we placed it
from the ocean floor which was a mile deep and we surveyed a region that is
seven miles in size looking for any morton droplets left over from the
explosion just to figure out was it a natural rock or
maybe a gadget and I taught my students before I
left if we find a gadget and it has buttons on it should I press a
button the opinions were split half of the class said please don’t do that he
put all of all of us at risk and the other half said “Please do we would like
to see if it’s judged BT 100.”
Um so we brought back materials um and it was a two-eek
expedition i put the this all the materials in this black suitcase and shipped them shipped it by FedEx to to
my home and then brought it to the laboratory of my colleague at Harvard Stein Jacobson
uh who has is a worldrenown geocchemist that has the best instruments in the
world and on on the other side of me in this photo is a summer intern Sophie
Berrum who worked with me that summer and she discovered
850 morton droplets within the materials that we brought back and I uh gave her
the honorary title the swirl hunter and you could see here what these
molten droplets looked like they were very distinct relative to the background sand and we picked them up with
tweezers and published the results and so there was one type of those molten
droplets about 10% of the entire reservoir that uh looked very unusual
they had a composition a chemical composition that was very different than solar system materials up to a thousand
times higher abundance of burillium lanthanum uranium than you find in storage system
materials and so that’s a possible indication that we found some material
from the original object but we want to go back and search for bigger pieces with a
robot that we will put on the ocean floor it will cost $6.5 million we don’t have a fund the rest of if anyone is
interested in joining us let me know this is an image from the last day of the previous expedition where I was
standing on the ship looking at the sunset and next to me is an 88 years old
art w artite who was a a commander of a
destroyer during the Vietnam War and I really liked him because he wouldn’t
speak much you would solve problems and everything said was true
and there aren’t many people like that these days what you find most often are people that are virtual
signaling that are trying to impress you that’s partly the culture of social
media but this mission was a success thanks to
art and he reminded me of my father i really liked him now this year this in August 2025
there is a new observatory in Chile that was funded by the Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation it’s
called the Vera Sea Ruby Observatory and it will survey the
southern sky every four nights and could find more like objects every few months
if they are out there and now we know to look at them in much greater detail we
can use the web telescope to do that and this telescope will use a camera that
is 3.2 2 gap pixels in resolution so a thousand times more than the number of
resolution elements you have in your cell phone so I’m very excited about the coming year or two uh we will have new
results from the observatories that the Galo project is building we will have potentially a new expedition where we
can look for bigger pieces of this first interstellar meteor and the Rubin Observatory might find more or more like
objects but if we really want to make fast progress we need more
funds if I had a $100 million or a billion dollars I know exactly what needs to be done and we can make we can
get much better understanding of our cosmic neighborhood as I said before uh this
the software that we develop would be of great use to the Department of
Defense thank you
thank you uh please follow me by uh Admiral Gang debt uh you’d like to say a
couple words and we’re going to try to make this uh brief so we can go ahead and uh start getting to some of the
questions siri thank you very much it’s just great to be here and representatives Luna and
Burles and Bett appreciate you giving us all an opportunity to to share what we
want to share and say what we want to say about this important topic of UAP so I’ll be about five minutes here maybe
less but today I call on the American scientific enterprise to mainstream UAP research and development and to do that
properly I should first begin by assessing the current state of UAP research there are a few brave
individuals and organizations conducting such research including professor Abby Lo through the Gallo project at Harvard
professor Diane Pilgra at UNCW Drs Gary Nolan and Peter Scayfish a
soul foundation with Stanford University doc Professor Jeffrey Cryopol with the
archives of the impossible at Rise University and the scientific coalition of UAP studies but these are by far the
exception where UAP research and scientific study is shunned by the American science community at large even
with dozens of credible former military witnesses coming forward as well as legislative action from Congress in
recent years this stigma remains too great to jeopardize the reputation promotion potential and tenure of those
in academia to better understand this resistance it might be useful for me to describe the
state of climate science in this country where the complete opposite is occurring as a former administrator of the
National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration with a PhD in oceanography I’ve studied the changes occurring in our Earth system and while
they are indeed significant I’m by no means a climate denier climate change is
far from the existential threat that the mainstream media and some in the science community claim it to be a false
narrative has been propagated that global warming caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gases is the cause of every
severe weather event on any given day this is mainly a result of the large number of scientific studies that employ
extreme and implausible emission scenarios lacking the expertise to critically evaluate such studies the
average citizen is rarely accepted such misinformation conflating every extreme weather event and climate change is
imprecise incomplete and incorrect the most glaring examples come around every hurricane season for which satellite
data over the 50 years shows there’s been no trend upward or downward of these storms the same goes for wildfire
where news coverage always links climate change to their occurrence but wildfires have actually been decreasing in this
country so even the intergovernmental panel on climate change has been unable to conclusively detect changes in
extreme weather and climate event frequency and intensity however saying that we are not in fact in a climate
crisis is heresy the mainstream media and the global science community this is a situation with UAP
but in reverse ample evidence even congressional testimony attests to the scientific valinity of UAP but the
response by members of the scientific community has been either A to bury their heads in the sand or b to make
baseless mockery of the courageous contrarians like Professor Low who seek the truth why is this so well the reason
is partially uh due to overclassification and a deliberate
decadesl long disinformation campaign by the US Department of Defense and intelligence community unlike climate
change UAP and the non-human intelligence which control them very well could be an existential threat as
our moderator who Alzando eloquently described in his book aptly named imminent the scientific community needs
to wake up to the reality of UAP which represents the most mile development since the confirmed
revolution consider the extraordinary report I received this weekend what a
former US Navy S860 Seahawk helicopter crew chief who was embarked on the
carrier USS Dwight D eisenhower in 2021 described to me is recording on or
overlooking infrared video of a metallic sphere at an altitude a few hundred feet
above the ship traveling along a linear trajectory horizontal to sea surface
before it accelerated into the horizon at an incre disappearing completely upon
landing uh he discussed this with some of the pilots and the other air crew before transferring the flur footage to
the carrier’s intelligence officer moreover this was not an isolated event for the Eisenhower strike group during
that deployment saw many many instances of UAP primarily F-18s frequently
encountering them at high altitude and uh and this topic was
widely discussed by the airwing during the entire uh deployment and later fellow air crew members of this this
crew sheet uh from another squadron deployed on board the USS Gerald R ford and shared similar
experiences the cruise sheet also informed me that the secret laptops in their ready room provided access to a
share drive where numerous UAP sightings on fleer were archived they stored these
videos on a folder named range fowers you’d like that Ryan and uh and this
commanding officer and safety officer were aware of these incidents but there was an unspoken understanding not to
discuss that I’m openly in the ready room i have spoken to other sailors still in active duty and their sightings
of UAP have become so numerous that they are desensitized to the phenomenon my point being that the Navy possesses a
trove of video evidence and data regarding UAP and I see no reason why flur footage of UAP and Navy training
ranges could not be declassified and shared with the scientific community with open access to more data like this
we could transform every institution of higher education by establishing a Galileo project within their astronomy
and astrophysics departments a sole foundation with their within their biio medicine and humanities programs and our
archive with the impossible in their religious studies of philosophy curricula to close I point out that last
month at the endless frontiers conference in Austin the president’s science advisor Michael Gracios committed the Trump administration to
creating a golden age in American innovation i am convinced that UAP
research can not only support this but accelerate it in ways beyond our imagination the time to destroy the
stigma associated with UAP is now i ask the House Oversight Committee and other
members of Congress to demand that DoD DOE DHS and NASA release more UAP data
for open science and I call on the White House to include UAP research in this 2025 reg priorities memo thank you all
hey dear so we didn’t get to our first
question here and uh it is not scripted and it is to uh my former colleague Dr
eric Davis um and be very careful how I ask this
specific question well Mr do good to see you as always sorry what no no it’s
okay you um Dr davis I I know your background and I
know your work uh in our former program the advanced aerospace bread identification program i also know to
some degree some of the history and firsthand experience you have on UAP
i believe that this committee uh and the esteemed members of Congress and the
American public would love to hear to the degree you’re able to discuss it the
direct access you had uh for those who don’t know Dr davis was and I’ll let him
answer this was and it was submitted into into the matter of record for Congress a couple years ago the Wilson
Davis memo it was alleged that he was the author and if you don’t know what that
is I encourage you to look it up it has been entered as a matter of public record in the congressional record and
it is extremely significant um this is the mayor i won’t
say he did or he didn’t although tell um who offered that potential and
furthermore I know has had involvement in the UAT program specifically from a
crash retrieval perspective i only mindful here uh Dr davis please be careful of security classification but
do you mind sharing to the degree you’re comfortable with your involvement with information relating crash
retrievalss and u and yours
yes thank you i’ve been uh I’m an astrophysicist and also a what we what
Mark Jones at NASA and I call we break to a propulsion physicist worked at radio propulsion from 1996 to 2002 and
then we continue after that to develop a book that we published through the AIAA press in 2009 uh for tiers of propulsion
science so my background is in uh advanced B space and interstellar space flight mostly bastion light propulsion
or the use of general typically cog theory as well as advanced nuclear propulsion nuclear fision and nuclear
fusion and uh beam der propulsion which I worked on as a principal investigator for the air force research lab in Dun’s
air force base so I’ve got quite a brown background and I began my work in UFOs
uh or UAP started in 1996 which Robert Bigalow hired me to work for him as his director dur physics and astrophysics at
the National Institute of Discovery Science and that was a um that was a pretty transformative shock for you
because as a physical scientist I’m seeing for the first time by phenomena I’m investigating it using forensic uh
science techniques in the field interviewing what is collecting care and I have a team of uh uh colleagues on the
staff that I work with also ks and uh we had a worldclass science advisory board which uh my former boss in Austin Hala
uh was on the was was on the board was on that science advisory board who was the last chair of that board actually we
also had Paul 14 astronaut Ed Mitchell and for a short time Apollo uh 17
astronaut Jack Schnet and uh we had many uh many academicians and corner CIA
national intelligence officers uh social psychologists psychologists medical doctors um and nuclear engineers and the
list goes on we had chalk bullying primarily as well so uh it was a really transformative because I grew up in the
60s and 70s and I became familiar with Carl Sean carl Sean and uh astronomer
report page co-authored a book called uh you the scientific debate which was published by the tripleas press um the
triple is the American uh association for the advancement of science and science is their prestigious true that
they publish and uh so that was a prestigious publication that okay every chapter was authored by experts in the
field in academia who have studied UFOs and some angle of it from scientific
data standpoint data that was collected data that was analyzed and so they presented it and followed the book uh
for a bizarre reason in the 1980s Carl Sean held this wonderful astronomy show
called Cosmos and be the companion cook for that and what’s ironic is
that he changed 180 degrees he all of a sudden with fro UFOs we have in this
book that I co-author or co-edited with Lord Le page uh all this wonderful data
that’s been collected that is not explainable due to conventional astronomical weather or man-made
explanations or events or objects Uh I’m I’m now calling it um pseudocience it’s spring sites people
were mistaken pilots uh have poor vision uh military pilots especially and I
heard that from Le David who’s a uh a aerospace engineer aviation space
exploration writer and uh people like Ken have said that our military pilots
especially the ones at the USS Gimmits during its encounters of the tic tac UAP back in November 2004 oh yes those
pilots have core vision they’re flying what 20 million dollar fighter aircraft over here and
they have core vision how did they get through the naval aviation program and top gun school at work uh Dr davis could
you could you elaborate a little bit on your to the degree that you’re comfortable oh I only so so it was a
transformative uh issue for me or or a job it uh transformed my world view it
opened up my world view up to a lot more possibilities and when I was used to thinking as a trained PhD physicist I
earned my doctor in answer physics at the University of Arizona in 99 and so um I worked on three space missions in
graduate school the IOS which is the over astronomical satellite program and the Choy true missions to the outer
planets so as pertaining to the topic that uh Lou wants to talk
about I’m not trying to obliterate that it is a sensitive subject
um so uh it’s due to astronaut Ed Mitchell uh Dr ed Mitchell captain USN
retired because of him and I won’t go into a long story but it’s because of him that I got on the trail of looking
for the so-called uh legend within the UFO community uh the retrangle of
crashed or landed UAP craft or UFO craft as they known back in those days and by
the way UAP the term unidentified aerial phenomenon goes back to the 1940s even
so um so I followed this trail and I ended up over the course of the
following two and a half decades working for Bigalow working for the air rers lab working for Halford off
atte uh and then uh and then working at the
aerospace corporation so we’re we’re working in a combination of industry and
classified programs that we were contracted to do on behalf of the uh or the Defense Intelligence Agency and for
the Pentagon agencies that Lou worked at and the UAP task force that J Stratton
led uh at the Office of Naval Intelligence and so uh a long story
short is that I came into contact with industry leaders technical scientists
uh both active duty and later retires as well as intelligence officers generals aggles colonels uh people who directed
intelligence or human intelligence collection and analysis directorates of the DIA and the Central Intelligence
Agency who uh reached out to me to have me do some foreign UAP uh intelligence
analysis and assessment and so uh I had been exposed to so much in the classified room that I
can tell you definitively that there is there there uh the human race basically
the world biggest governance uh like the United States our adversary China and
Russia at least as far as I know have had the uh occasion to recover craft
that have either landed or crashed or both uh in their territory or even outside of their territories and how
taking those back to they’re more the most sensitive of their programs that they’ve ever have these programs are uh
even more sensitive and more well hidden than uh Manhattan project was or or the
modern nuclear weapons industry and and the US military the department of energy programs to uh maintain and and upgrade
and modernize our weapons arsen and so um this is one of the this is one of the
most well-hidden programs it is hidden for congressional oversight and always has been and it was hidden by the action
of the President Eisenhower who instituted presidential emergency action directives during his administration
these directives are not shared with Congress they are classified they and when the freedom of information act was
instituted in the 70s it is not subject those are not subjected to the freedom of defamation act uh request um this
these directives provide cover for actions that are associated with the
with the retrieval of these vehicles and the uh and the scientific engineering study up there and that takes place
within the street um what happens is the department of defense offices CIA
offices they create shell companies they give a sole source contract to the shell
company would pass the money to a selected group of uh defense industry firms and those firms would take that
contract money and turn it around and uh use that as internal fundings called
internal research and development inputs which they give to their own people inside their company their own employees to do the reverse engineering and uh
analysis and study it of these recovered feelings and so this avoids all
congressional oversight it avoids the gang bait and um it’s one of the most clever techniques used to hide it and as
far as I know only one fourstar general uh and one to three star were able to locate these programs and um and that’s
about as much as I could say they located the programs uh and they uncovered them one got a lot of
resistance and hostile reception and was uh told that uh he found who was looking
where they were who they were suspected being yes they were a UFO UAP rash
criminal in reverse engineered per the other one uh had a lot more political power behind him because of his statue
was a fourstar general and uh he was able to get into the program and use his authority and his access i think they
call that a uh super user the super user have access to all ways all specialized access programs
so he had his capability built under that horde uh I was fortunate to meet Dave Rush at the behest of um Jay
Stratton dave was a NRO liaison officer to the UAQ task force and Dave was
working for his boss at the NRO which was situated in the second force gifts
uh of the aerospace corporation building Colorado sprays and I was assigned work at the aerospace corporation facility in
Huntsville because I was supporting NASA’s space nuclear propulsion program office so uh Jake Dame and and Dave’s uh
boss and I together and I briefed them for two and a half days just a week before COVID struck and uh Dave took all
my classified and uh proprietary information of all the investigations I did at VidS AFRO and working for uh how
could operate and he took that data around with it and what you now know the aftermath of that was his classified
whistleblower group to the IG of the IC and um so there’s there we have had this
program going on in various guys’s various code names code names Jake roughly every three years Um they often
shipped around due to major office and programmatic new organizations for
presidential administration presidential administration maybe every 5 to 10 years in some case and so these things are are
very old they uh they come in the gone that they’re still around and uh the gun lady that’s been involved uh I would say
since the beginning in 1944 with the first recovery utility of a of the US
Army’s recovery of the craft that crashed in Italy back in 1933 the United States Army invaded Italy and pushed the
third ripe out they were able to recover that craft and bring it back to right airfield and all of crash retrievals
that would take place generally on land and gone to right airfield fuel the majority of the crash retrievals or
recoveries of whatever uh situation It was uh Hey place in the rear tire and
I’m not sure where that is going i think they’re probably also wonder where in those days writer field idol play today
though because I’ve only worked on the legacy uh history of this part of it up until about uh the early 2010s and ever
since the end of the OSAP and the ATIP I don’t know where that those operations
are born these days so I think that’s about it will is that it
okay uh if there was a question I would always ask and I’ll just say this very
easy uh Leslie King and Rob Woodenal asked me this for an interview I gave them um in July of 2020 for the New York
Times article that they published they interviewed Lou and uh Senate uh former Senate Jury or Harry Ree i think Harry
was already retired there wasn’t he yeah okay so I said basically my interface
with the leadership at the industry uh which were a number of individuals is the following the crop that have been
recovered are not reserved they’re not made by human behaviors they are not of this planet they are not human they are
an aliote technology whatever the word alien means are they extraterrestrial we don’t know we don’t know uh what motives
do they have well we need anthropologists social psychologists and philosophers to figure that out they
haven’t communicated that ghost yeah so uh physicists like me and Abby we cannot
answer questions like motor we just need to take data we call it measurements and signals intelligence and the intelligence illustrate and Abby I
support 1000% because we need him to do what he needs to do uapx is another
group up in the University of Mini in New as well and there are other groups
out there uh building up their own sensor speeds to try to scan the sky fulltime 247 to look for something
that’s eye and definitely not weather definitely not a crap definitely not a kids blue buttcock
well thank you Dr davis my recommendation would be at some point gear to get to classified setting some
of the rest of us had even already done that before and had a free conversation with some of the representatives who I
think would be um really interested to hear the other part of that conversation which I am aware of and been part of
um with that said uh before we go on I wanted to thank real quick uh Rep nick
Bett for uh is that how do you pronounce your name sorry sir I apologize beg okay for begitch uh Rep nick Begich who we
arrived uh here just not too long ago so thank you sir very much uh for from
Alabama but from Oh
Alaska obviously my dyslexia instead of whoever wrote this
um thank you sir for being here and also great seeing you Mr um as far as uh the
next question what I’d like to do is direct this to Adam heavy debt sir only
about 50% of the se4 has been mapped in high resolution in fact some have
stipulated that we have known even more about the surface of our own moon than the depths of our own
oceans concrete mapping campaigns autonomous gliders deep sea sonars or
cabled observatories would give researchers the best chance of
detecting undersea UAP activity up to this point we’ve been discussing about
the stuff we see in our skies and possibly space but the one thing we’ve neglected are those observations of UAP
that are under armor and this kind of goes to the whole trained medium characteristic that we’re seeing that
some of these UAP can display particularly as a former Navy man and uh
member of Noah what what what advice could you offer there thanks that’s a
great question and uh in fact uh I would advise us to continue what we started in
Trump’s first administration and what we did is we got him to sign presidential memorandum on mapping the USUS economic
zone and that directed the establishment of a strategy a plan national strategy a
plan and a council an area council to contribute to the effort and so in the few we did this in 2020 and in the five
years since we’ve been able to go from having 40% of our EEZ map to 50% and and
it involves not only using ships sonar but also exploring the water column with deep diving remotely operated vehicles
swarms of drones underwater drones he’s done 120 in the Navy and that that fleet’s grown and uh and then Noah has a
pretty sizable fleet of of underwater and circus drones and they partner with the private sector that has a vast
capability as well so I’d say I’d say we really want to ex expand the work that’s
already occurring within the government and the private sector and and target it because most of it is targeted towards
ocean science and that’s great but if we open the aperture a bit and include UAP as a research target I think we’ll learn
a lot more about the phenomena as well as the ocean thank you very much uh the next question
we have is uh is geared towards Dr abilo here and my question
for you sir is what is your recommendation for the new generation of
scientists who want to enter into this field of study but don’t know exactly
where it began yes I actually gave up on the senior members of our community and I I have
great thought that the young generation approach it bias because science is all about
evidence and curiosity and we lose that when we become the adults in the room so for the
young uh people in fact I was asked to establish a gala observatory in a muscel
uh campus that will be built in Indiana and I’m very excited about that because
those high high school students and uh fledgling scientists would be unbiased
they would look at the data and try to figure it out that’s the way science should be done and very often if you
assume something if you say there is nothing out there and you are not looking that obviously that’s a
self-fulfilling prophecy so I very much hope that the young generation will
approach this subject without any stigma without any prejudice without any bias
because it’s of great interest to national security and even if it has nothing to
do with what lies outside the solar system we need to figure it out
maybe other nations have technologies that we are not aware of and if we do find something from
outside the solar system it’s the biggest discovery ever made in science
it will change our perception and our place in the universe i had a group of uh
religious people that came and and they belong to Christianity today an
organization and they asked me what could be the implications to religion and I said well I have two daughters and
when the second one was born I didn’t lose any of my love to the first one so
imagining that God can only attend to one civilization is very limited and I think in fact you know it
would be enriching to realize that we have siblings we might be jealous if they’re more advanced than we are maybe
they get more attention but you know that’s
exciting we may get inspiration from finding something better than us so why
is it that academia the mainstream is shying away from this partly because the
public cares so much about it and you know there are lots of
statements that are not correct that being made by people who have no evidence but that should not be a reason
to avoid this subject we should study it and young people I think have the ability to
figure it out if we had the resources allocated to the research we figure it
out we have that equipment it’s much more exciting than figuring out what dark matter is whether there are
microbes on exoplanets which probably exist in any warm water environment
similar to Earth i’m willing to bet that there are microbes but I don’t care much about
that i really want to fly things that are better than us so that we can get
better we can improve ourself and the young generations hopefully when do it for us if we only allocate the resources
we don’t bluff them because the gatekeepers going to use this technique
of not funding such research ridiculing it and even when I
went on the expedition people said “Oh he will not find anything oh he went to
the wrong place we don’t believe the US government data from the US space command.”
And my suggestion is just to ignore the naysayers because they are boring go
ahead okay
all right thank you Dr little i’ll make this very quick i know one of our representatives is very short on time
there’s a question to ask in her presence uh the question goes to Dr davis or Dis uh we had discussions at
length in certain settings uh in formal official settings and I depart up where we talk about exotic material i think it
might be very helpful to the degree you can can you could you please explain um
what is what makes exotic material that has been recovered from the US government exotic what makes it
different from atomically and kind of it’s actually very simple answer it’s
the way it’s fabricated it’s the way it’s fabricated that’s what makes it exotic it’s not a new element that’s
never been discovered uh and placed on the periodic table of elements no them
uh the materials are in the periodic tables they’re either radioactive isotopes that we already know of or
they’re any of the other non radio non-actide elements on the table it’s just the combination of the materials is
unusual uh it could be that you could say that that’s exotic but it’s the
composition it’s how do you do sculp crowd the materials that form the crowd and everything inside the crowd it’s
it’s quite exotic because uh one of the company’s uh leadership was a young
material scientist when he graduated with his doctorate at material science from uh one of the university uh one of
the ill universities in Illinois back in 1970 and he was hired by Ben Rich work
with a team at scope works that was the uh advanced projects a developer agency
I think is what blockic air crackup he called them back in those days so um so
basically this is what he was telling me he’s a advanced material solutist and he said well we could use the best
diagnostical equit that we had back in those days uh which was 6070s 80s and
90s and uh we could see the elements through mascot mass spectroscopy that
compose these structures but when we look at how they’re composed and structured uh it’s it’s like nothing
we’ve been able to fabricate or we’d never be able to do so And we had no
extrapolated engineering or physics technology to tell us or inform us on and how we could possibly learn how to
fabricate this iron so they they understood that it’s the combination of the elements was very unusual uh it was
counterintuitive but it’s the way the materials are fabricated that’s what makes it exotic
thanks thank you very much sir next question is going to go yes ma’am absolutely four is yours yeah so thank
you for you guys come today i have to get going but I am charging Burlesen and Burchchett uh to be here and continue on
while I am not here uh but I will say that I mean the stuff that you guys have all told us today mind-blowing and I
think you know going on record it even more cord so we are going to buddy back to alto by some point uh but I do have
to head up to thank you so much for your time sap and we’ll
be thank you for being here okay so the next question is going to
uh I’ve got a long list of questions for obviously I’m going to get to them all we have to try to stay on track so it’s probably going to be my last question
for this and we could go on all day but we’ve got two other panels we have to get through and there’s going to be some
new information for you last question before the break abided uh I know that
you were privy to the incidents in you at rearing the USS Roosevelt in fact there’s another distinguished guest we
have with us here today Ryan Bra who’s pilot uh who uh has been very helpful
informing Congress about some of the air safety issues because he himself has come up close and personal with one of
these objects whatever they are um could you please provide a brief synopsis on
your experience and more importantly what was the reaction by certain elements within the
department of defense and some of your frustration that you experienced regarding that reporting that type of
reporting thanks Lou and yes I would be glad to is at the time of the Rosebell UAP sightings i was the onestar animal
in charge of all the Navy meteorologists oceanographers and I had a I had aographers mates on the ship doing the
weather forecast and and as the chief meteorologist of the Navy my responsibility was safety of flight one
of my main responsibilities and at the time I received an email Navy’s classified system secret system uh it
was addressed to every subordinate under command called Fleet Force Command the four-star command that I reported to and
that the commander of the boat the Roosevelt Strike reported to as well as several other units and attached to the
email was the go fast video that everybody’s seen now and has been declassified and released to the public
uh and the email title was urgent safety apply issue and all capital letters and
it came from the operations officer of Fleet Forces Command asking if any of the recipients of the email knew what
these were these UAP because they were having numerous near midair collisions as as Ryan Graves uh saw firsthand his
his squadron mates and uh and then the next day uh that email was wiped from my
computer and no one talked about it in any subsequent meetings to play Porsches command and this was very unusual
because the primary job of fleet forces commands to prepare Navy units to deploy like the the Roosevelt strike route and
that exercise was a critical pre-eployment uh requirement to get pilot certified to land on flight deck
and so not talking about an urgent safety or flight issue for example the UAP that split a section of aircraft you
don’t want anything to get within a mile of an FAT when when it’s operating so that that they didn’t talk about it that
was covered up uh didn’t sit well with me and and that’s the reason I have come out today and or really for the past few
years uh to talk about this and make sure we we support all these reasons to
uh to acknowledge uh and make be more transparent about UAP activity and data
and that’s why I’m on the advisory board of Brian’s American Pursuit Aerospace and we’ve been advocating for the FAA to
institute a system of reporting with standards to get more information out
there uh to support safety flight and science excellent admiral Gett you have a
question by uh Representative Rosson go ahead sir four is yours yeah thank you um Mr davis I wanted to ask before you
before this panel is over um want to pull some threads here the
um what is your understanding of the physics um or the likely propulsion
technology what is your assessment of of what the capabilities are and how it’s
being achieved and then also if what what I want to ask about materials and energy
as well uh we can only speculate uh these things are so far and advanced uh
we can only speculate the best speculation I could come up with is general opportunity does
a great job predicting something like a warp bubble uh UAE do exhibit the phenomenon of sublight or less light
speed for bubbles uh however that’s becomes a challenge when you talk about
UAV that dive into the ocean and climb up out of the in the ocean and up into
the earth so uh war so it’s not warping spacetime it’s a warping space time yeah
that’s described on Einstein Jen theory and so the problem is you gravity warp
space time that’s right right yeah so so that these objects are
changing space time around them yeah they you have a thin shell uh energy and
the type of energy has to be would have to be negative energy density and consistent with the type of energy
density that you can create for me and examples of that are Casmir Cali that
has a little vacuum region that’s bound by the two
plates of the cavity uh there’s also squeeze like squeeze states of light where that’s a laser beam where you’re
going to take uh uh some part of canonical uh noise fluctuations for part
of that part of the beam you’re not interested in and pile it up uh elsewhere in the phase space and this is
getting very technical so so I’ll just kind of keep it this way you’re going to take the gland vacuum
fluctuation that we know is to waves or shuts in laser beach or your pile somewhere else uh in the area you’re not
interested in measuring and you only want to measure the amplitude of that beam and that point when you take the quantum values and fluctuations and that
amplitude that energy density goes negative and the energy density it’s a squared the amplitude so that goes
negative and uh that’s an example of negative energy the uh the mass of the earth creates space-time if it was I’m
sorry oh I was going to say so that space-time curvature which wouldn’t feel as if the poison is browing on the surface of the earth drags down boiling
back in the flu flux fluctuations of the poor fields at her out space near near the earth in the vicinity of the earth
and uh that energy do you have to be negative and so this is an example of
theoretically predicted astronomical sources of negative energy as well as a laboratory source energy so that’s what
you would need to build a war belt and that’s what you need to build a uh construct the shell just a brief comment
of clarification we have two pillars modern physs quantum mechanics
and Einstein’s theory gravity which is curvature of spacetime right we don’t have a reliable theory that combines a
pip quantum gravity so what we are hearing is
speculation we not have the knowledge to figure out if you can create character
of space time out of negative energy density because we have never mastered this technology we don’t have an
understanding of that so it’s possible that and millennium from now we’ll have those
quantum gravity engineers you know that’s possible currently we just you know we’re just like too prietic
technologically to figure it out the question is is there something in position of government that the
scientists should look it too and you know I would love to to have government figure it out because it may guide us
about a theory of quantum reality if if we can so we have to enus about these bays and we can speculate that uh or
what the best approach to take just over work bubble or ease a shell of billion energy that would create a tourist war
which would be a shortcut to use space he told two distant things but um we
have we have craft in our possession um there are no physicists merely working
in those programs they’re basically mechanical aerodynamics aerospace thermal control engineers electronic
electrical engineer and material scientists and material science is a part of engineering out uh us overlaps
chemistry as well and they’ve never had a physicist like him or I uh they’ve
never had an applied physicist or an experimental physicist and so they are really lacking in the ability to
understand Holland as well sir the latest program has been very ins isolated and insular so unfortunately uh
it’s it’s a bit of a my approach here of a bit ancestrous community uh there’s
not a whole lot of outside involvement because it is so high classified and that’s been some of the frustration and
I think challenges technologically speaking because we haven’t been able to recently apply new talent new ideas new
theories to what may be uh what the US car may be in possession of what about
the energy attention um the energy is a question of comments we’re seeing right
yeah we I haven’t been able to access that Dr davis can you talk for a moment sorry about the limits and that the
calculations for the object to go from 80,000 ft within less than a second 50
ft over the water what what type of energy uh require talking about hundreds of times the total electrical energy
produced in the United States annual that’s the kind of energy that is representative of the observed features
and performances of UEP crap especially chitchat that the Davidson County remember of 2004 and uh so it’s hundreds
and hundreds of times what the what the United States produces ambient and how
and so uh that that could occur really well with the interstellar spacecraft that will tr relativist ultra relativist
ultra relativist to beat anywhere from 90 to 99% speed like the energy just is
astronomically huge so um these craft uh I have not been I don’t have the
security clearances I need to know to get access to the technical details but I’m made to understand that the prer
consisted in size when the tic tac uh even double in size of the tic tac uh
that would be up to 100 ft long by uh 50t diameter of that type brewery shaped
craft um arrowshaped crack triangular shaped craft and so forth uh the biggest ones that had been observed especially
that we investigated in 1999 in Balby Sky Air Force Base that was a 600 foot
long prowl and it was about roughly 100 ft tall and uh so they don’t have
possession crap like that i’ve never been told that it’s usually the more man scammed somebody couldn’t move
so we my villain yeah so uh so we we could always speculate um I know Jim
Kasy grown into his book uh I over time limited but anyway it was
go to Colin Kelliger by Wet Mitch and uh George Nap of K TV in Las Vegas and so
Jim mentioned and I Jim was the program manager for the AA Damas the AAS
uh WAP it was and um and so basically he described in his
book somebody I I don’t know if it him because he never I think he said it was him uh went inside one of these craft
that he had access to and they couldn’t recognize any propulsure or power
devices or systems inside a crap it’s complete in a huge trouser and I have
speculated that possibly their teleport energy from a most distant location where the energy is produced is
teleported tubic trout and that’s how the craft can move around without having to carry propellant uh or rocket engine
or or an advanced work drive engine on it that’s one possibility that there’s separate on the
material so what do you have you think is carbon can take multiple forms right
are you saying that that is the same with other material other elements the way which what we found is
different forms of these elements that we be different how it be different combinations of the elements is the big
ratios as well correct yeah so you’re you’re you’re going to have a variety of
uh whatever structural part of this that came off of the EVP and I don’t know even though was it I didn’t have s uh
way better dodge SAP access I We have TSSCI so at the SCI level I was informed
that there’d be combinations of elements periodic table combination they’re isotopes so we have a variety pelon uh
as they naturally occur or some isotopes of them mixed together in a certain way and then they’re structurally built in a
very unusual way that even chain we have no um equival so these weren’t these this is
about as much as I was given information at an SEI and do you have or can you
comment on whatever species and then
uh how did these craft how are they large in are they are they multiple
species or they are they what is their size and how many yard usually on a crab
they’re typically the multiple species people really like the grays the mortics uh people were talked about reptilians
and insecttoides is that they’re reptilian or insecttoides that they resemble uh to the precidim reptile or
an insect type human because they have this a handed four limbs and
torso so large small uh human size human scale and are there other crew well the
crew well the grays I’m familiar with from uh investigating the crash Crash at Bironia which is mis misnamed the the
crash of Roswell it’s not the grassy roswall it’s the grass at Bronia messier those were grays those were four foot
tall and uh the Nordics are typically human size uh probably I from five six
feet tall um and same with the people who this this label reptilian and insect
work they’re roughly that height too i haven’t heard anything about anything
some in Greek pe
uh dinner uh folks what we’re going to do here
we are going to take a 3minut break for a change here of the panel we’re going to roll right into it if you need to use
a ref you please do so but we are going to truncate this break significantly because we’ve got a lot to cover and you
definitely want us to do for this man as well big round of applause for our
panelist train to catch so they wait to get out of here so
…
Enhanced Audio YouTube Transcript Part Two
all right folks uh we could shut that door we’re going to get rolling here i want to be cognizant of the representative’s
time all right next part of this u panel discussion
will involve uh national security uh before we
begin I would like to share something with you this is Dr plan and I just receive permission to
share this with you this
morning and I read what I’m saying is this thing now that is important and relevant to this conversation will be so
invable to event uh very relevant to this
conversation we talk about national security a lot and our pilots are men women uniform verified warrior for us
the combat there’ll be a whole sector out there also that’s our commercial piles
besian copper was taken 2021 over four foreign region and now the approxim
21,000 ft by a power pilot outside his aircraft
um and this is a photo of a coffee for com to see it was taken by a uh all
information on the camera I do please give permission today to share this with
um it is only object it and looked at the shadow being cast it is
significantly large now to 21,000 ft taken by a civilian
pilot now why is this important i’ll pass this
around um I’ll copy on your pinch as well can you pass
along down for them this tang from a civilian pilot right not a fleer system not an
infrared system but an average person with an average camera at 21,000 ft and the
object potentially is anywhere between 600 to 1,000 ft in
diicular object and it is silver now uh I cannot go for the veracity of this
photograph i didn’t tell you to um but this is an example of one of many many
many incidents involving commercial and private pilots and guess what they don’t
know where to report it guess what congress has no idea that this has happened on a regular
basis that’s a problem and why is this relevant because right you’re going to hear from two speakers i’ll introduce
you to them in a moment who uh who are experts in national security and have been um
following this topic for some time what I’d like to do is uh introduce you to Mr
chris Melon first and foremost uh Chris Melon is a uh former former boss and
boss boss boss he was a senior staff director if I’m not mistaken uh here at
the Senate at the time with uh Bill Cohen Senator Bill Cohen and then he later went to the Department of Defense
and became the first uh what you might call the under secretary of defense for intelligence the position before there
was a dazzy that Debbius is the secretary descent for basically Crystal is responsible for all the intelligence
equities globally globally for the department of defense right anything from human
operations to special life as programs and everything else
um Chris has been a spearhead in public engagement getting
the academic community the scientific community everybody intelligence committee all to
apply their efforts and time and talent and resources to
this very real problem the next individual uh is Mr kirk can come up uh sen former
senior military officer as well and Mary senior staffer on the s subsider for the
senate arlet services committee who was instrumental in helping get Dr eric
Davis to provide classified briefings to certain members of Congress i won’t say
who that’s not my place to say um Kurt has been in shadows for a very
long time and he has been extremely effective in getting this topic at the highest and to the attention of the
highest levels of our government and that two other administrations of wealth
not just this one and the one before that as well um so with that said
there’s a whole lot more could go and I could spend probably half an hour going over their academic meet today their accomplishers um but rather what I’d
like to do is spend some of that time instead and allowing them to have discussion with you here today some
questions I think Chris Melon first um has a presentation he’d like to provide thank you so I’m going to give the floor
to Chris Melon please uh welcome Mark to our new
panel busy embarrass
thank you that uh overly uh kind introduction and uh my thanks to the to
the congressman for taking time out of their busy schedules to be here with us and everyone else who contributed
especially Jordan Flowers i just returned from uh South America uh for
about 4 weeks and uh uh promised I would not work on anything related to UAP the
whole time and uh got back here and made a quick
turn all under the weather wouldn’t have a briefing if it wasn’t for uh for Jordan and uh his assistance uh what I
want to talk about uh is I don’t think the public is aware of the
extent of her airspace vulnerabilities and failures and the
decreeing in which they already been exploited and are being exploited today
and the challenge that we face in trying to sort this out i’d also want to pit a
little bit based on uh earlier conversations i wasn’t uh going to get
into this so much but Dr w talked about spending a billion dollars or so to
develop new sensors to collect information one of my career frustrations in the intelligence
community has been that we have incredible sensors that are far more than a billion
dollars and we have a great many of them and they are collecting information
today which is directly pertinent to this topic but that information is not
reaching congress it’s not reaching the scientific community uh in many cases I
don’t think it’s reaching arrow which is the office that congress established to
study and evaluate this phenomena so if we could have the first slide please or
is this going to be there Yeah so here’s just a little overview of
uh Tom touched on which is the word shocking I think is uh is not an
exaggeration or hyperbole in this case uh we really are effectively doing it
from Jerin standpoint when it comes to these drones uh I’ll talk and provide
very specific examples to illustrate that uh and the UAP uh and uh let me get
here okay this is a uh sure you don’t have this drag in front of you but this
is an ant that displays roughly the coverage provided by something called
the solid state phased array radar system these are recordedly the most
powerful emitters on the planet if there are other civilizations in nearby solar
systems they’re more likely to detect these emitters than probably anything else on our planet uh how many UAP would
you guess they have detected in say the last 20
years that had been reported to error zero zero
zero how is it possible to the most powerful radar I’ve been writing to
about this for years by the way effectlessly go this is not a dupage to somebody in Congress to listen
to this and pay attention for years will testify to that that your observance
committee because I keep going up there and had them for years say guys how come this ever detects a UMD how is that
possible these are the most powerful leaders on the planet look at the area they cover and Oh by the way will you
look at the area they covered so we keep having reports over and over again from
tactical systems from ships plane and aircraft in the areas covered by these
radar so Eegis ships planes flown by
uh Mr brian here and his naval aviator colleagues and others are reporting UAE
uh UAP constantly in these areas but somehow these systems never seem to see
a UFP error how is that possible it happened
though he’s asking about that is this a Chinese balloon situation where all we
need to do is tweak the filters and lo and behold we’re going to bring into
focus something which is uh it drums if nothing else they’re a viable absolutely
viable uh air security sign we know that in Russia and the
Ukraine today drones are causing more casualties and killing more people than
any other weapon system right so this is utterly transformed
warfare as we know it here’s a multi-billion dollar system it’s up and
running this is the successor to the old ballistic missile early warning system so its primary function is to detect
ballistic missiles coming over the poles from Russia or China or from North Korea and developed intercept solutions uh but
it also has a mission of detecting sea launch cruise missiles and bombers and so forth so there’s couple there’s one
of several possibilities either we’ve spent billions of dollars on a system that’s
not performing as it should be or uh it just you know maybe needs some
some tweaks and filters to expand the the range of things that reports on a
you know one of the challenges with these systems is to avoid clutter right because they’re so powerful they collect
so much they’ve got to filter it down so what’s being displayed is reasonable and
appropriate to the mission uh it could be a problem of that sort or
it’s simply so highly classified that the information is not reaching
error i favor the latter i think that’s what’s going on and I think if Congress
were to to poke hard on this uh maybe get an inspector general to look at
these possible options or otherwise uh look into this they they would get some
answers next question is that data from that system be archived
i believe so i don’t know how far back they go and how how that’s a great
question i don’t know how far back he goes and uh one of the things so when
you approach NORAD about this with the Air Force you start asking about this data and what are they seeing so right
now my understanding is by the way that they don’t even tell Arrow uh which
whose director is supposedly clear for everything they don’t even tell him when they scramble fighter aircraft to
conduct intercepts so they’re regularly scrambling fighter aircraft i’ve talked to and interviewed on television a NORED
officer who told an account of walking into Cheyenne Mountain uh where he uh
for duty and everybody was standing on their feet looking at the big screen and
there was a UAP coming down from the arctable on the east coast of the United States and the commander-in-chief of
Norz said quote I want that f and everybody said yes sir and they were
watching everything we have in the east coast couldn’t get near it couldn’t get a radar lock uh it disappeared out over
the southern Atlantic is that the only time that ever happened the one time
that this NORAD officer gave us a town from the 1990s when the system was much
less capable than it is today and when we’re seeing fewer uh things than we are
today and and fewer intrusions over the sleeping airspace I ra it uh this is by
the way only one of the number of multibillion dollar systems they’re
already deployed they’re collecting data that bears directly on this topic and don’t
seem to be reporting anything to Arrow so the arrow issued a report in your
last report they said we don’t have anything in they haven’t seen any UAD in
space but they were I think 40 instances in which groundbased reporters like
civilian airwide pilots reported things far above beyond what they call the
carman line in 100,000 ft which is what they consider outer space for these
purposes now there’s another system called the groundbased electrooptical
uh deep space surveillance system which is a ring of cameras circling the globe
that does nothing but stare at the night sky all night long how come those systems didn’t
detect what these pilots are talking about they’re looking up saying “I saw these bright lights moving etc etc.”
Well there’s one of these cameras on top of uh of uh our one of our highest peaks
and why it does nothing but stare at the night sky that same night sky all night long did it miss that was it a cloudy
night has any of those cameras ever collected one of these incidents they
said there were 40 uh I would think somebody ought to take an inventory and say we want to know
which of these surveillance systems is reporting UAP and uh which are not and
what specifically are they reporting taking inventory again is there a systemic problem or failure with these
systems the taxpayers spending billions of dollars i would we would want to know that now interestingly with regard to
the GI system I uh one occasion at colleague who was visiting for a sort of
routine oversight uh purpose many years ago and I said while you’re there Pete
why don’t you ask that they ever seen anything strange i didn’t said wine saucer but
that’s what I was alluded to and he knew what I was talking about so he asked the question and sure enough this the month
before on that one occasion when the question was asked they had indeed
collected uh photographic imagery of it was a four or five objects moving
through the night sky and formation traveling parallel to the earth’s surface i don’t know that the question
has ever been asked since that was probably 20 years ago i find it hard to
believe that in all that time that they haven’t collected anything relevant to
this question and I don’t understand why that data is not getting error i don’t
know if anyone has again has even got a checklist to make sure that when
Congress issued this directive and said you’re going to there’s a reporting
requirement now everybody needs to report this stuff it needs to go to the Air Force it needs to tilt down through
the commands is anything coming back up from these system do these people even know they’re supposed to
report and is there any reporting of that kind going on it’s another system
called the spacebased infrared system multibillion dollar system this
is again in the unclassified domain what I’m talking about here there’s quite a
bit you know additionally that is paid for by the taxpayer this permit it’s a
very robust system with satellites in multiple orbits highly elliptical orbits
geospatial orbits very high precision it’s looking for infrared uh in heat
kinds of events uh as far as I know they have detected reported the arrow zero
UAPs okay maybe nothing happened maybe they haven’t seen anything but it does
make you wonder in this case it’s particularly strange since we know there
are dozens if not hundreds of UAP incidents happening within the areas
that this system is supposed to revive coverage of for example fumes nemesis
incident occurred excuse me almost directly in front of the radar at Beiel Air Force
Base right off the coast and this went on for about a week or so and you had
objects descending from 60,000 ft and back up so I don’t think anyone could
say well they were so small and they were so close to the water it wasn’t within range of the radar these things
were at very high altitudes and this was going on on a sustained
basis so my suspicion is now I understand that that data could be
highly classified i could understand why it might not be the quality domain what I can’t understand is why Arrow does not
see to be aware of this data and why the appropriate congressional committees do
not seem to be aware of the influence of this do I realistically expect them to
happen because I’m raising this here no because I’ve been doing this for years
but what the heck we’re here might as well try again
uh let’s go on to uh to the next slide so
uh we have uh an incredible series of events that
have been happening i wrote an article a year ago to this month called Who’s
Operating the Drones Plaguing the US Military and uh uh it did actually get
read by a producer for 60 minutes who subsequently did a piece which featured
several uh fourstar officers who in fact confirmed what I was discussing and
alleging in the article uh with regard to the events that occurred at Landley
Air Force Base and elsewhere is true here’s the air combat
command which is supposed to be protecting these gentlemen in this institution where we’re sitting and
Capitol Hill and the White House and the US government and they can’t protect the
road airspace they have to move uh our cutting edge F22 fighter squadron to a
Navy base from the air force base and this is going on for I forget how
long it was couple of weeks roughly uh and we’re talking
about strange craft bright lights appeared over this
base making it unsafe to fly night after night after
night and to this day we have no idea where they were coming from we don’t know the capabilities we don’t know who
was controlling them and that remains true not just for that base and that incident but for numerous other bases so
the first incident and the war zone is a great source for global incidents topic violated to
recording 2018 in Guam we’ve installed a
$1.5 billion dollar anti-bballistic missile system and these brightly lit small
cracks show up they go right to the THAD missile battery and are shining bright
lights down on it like photograph and this happens two nights in a row so back in 2018 it wasn’t as
apparent as it is now but obviously those drones could have been weaponized
they could have easily taken that battery out and eviscerated the the uh
ballistic missile defense on our reading facility of the Pacific not to mention
the fact I just went to that uh to Google Maps this morning to check that air base and that air base like Lanley
and my some of the others has very few hardened shelters so those multiund million
dollar aircraft that are on the runway could easily be destroyed by drones they’re
costing what a 2,000 bucks okay that’s how vulnerable we are
then in 2019 we began to see this activity off the coast of the United
States in California and I’ll read a little uh excerpt from one of those
reports uss Paul Davton observed four UAS with a closest point of approach
approximately 200 yards off the bow port and starboard
beefs you they had a uh on time station of approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes
so if you ever if you have children and you have drones at home you know that
they usually are have a maximum time of about 20 minutes these were in station
for 2 hours and 20 minutes 60 80 miles off the shore uh not
apparent where they could have been launched from what their total uh dwell time was uh the anti-UAS systems on the
ship were ineffective in uh in bringing them down the first UAS spotted by
lookouts at 240 uh observed with a single white light they go on to report others within
500 yards maneuvering four in act with four white lights and a threshing red
light they’re not trying to be sly they’re not trying to declusten approximately 200 yards above
the ship again maneuvering right around the ship back and for up and down uh
they went to the ridge of the ship with a powerful search light or photographic device so they’re actually had cases
where they go right up to the bridge and ship and shine a bright light in on the captain and the senior
crew that’s how over and provocative this is and
that apparently reflects their degree of compass that we can’t intercept them and
bring them down whoever it is that’s operating that same year we began to see
them around nuclear power plants in 2020 very strange uh situation out west this
went on not just for weeks this went on for months in one of the least densely
populated is a slide that kind of shows and maybe it’s back uh roughly part of
the region we’re talking about here yeah eastern Colorado and western
Oklahoma so we’re talking about farmland i drove out west king last winter and
drove kind of through the area it is incredibly sparsely populated there is
uh there’s very very very little bear and yet these drones were operating in
groups husters as many as 40 drones at a time they formed a uh this was so extensive
and there was so much uh eventual fur raised among the ranchers and farmers
that they formed a task force involving the FBI Department of Homeland Security
local law enforcement they deployed a special claim that the governor of California authorized that had sensors
on it and this continued to occur and we never found out where these things were
coming from who was operating them i called a sheriff there and spoke to Yim
and told me a fascinating story he said he was actually a deputy sheriff but the sheriff was also witness they responded
to a call and there were a group of these lights over this farm and uh a
brighter light came in a larger light and the smaller lights went inside it
and it took off at an extreme velocity and passed almost directly over the
sheriff and the deputy and he told me “I’ve never seen anything move that fast.” is also in the
military reserves uh this individual so uh and that report by the
way he called it a mothership uh it’s not just the story that I happen to hear
if you look at the documentation from the air force office special investigation the FBI and it
work you’ll see written documentation from other witnesses that refers to a mothership
so this is actually well documented very strange and very
concerning uh we don’t know what is in operating in our airspace and this
continues often in militarily sensitive areas 2023 Arizona test range as you
heard about landling but we do uh a lot of flying in the southwest flying
conditions are great is a ter place for the air force we have orange air force bases there and the some of the strange
things we’re seeing in the number and the rate and frequency with which this
is happening is extraordinary so um this includes now your average drone
is restricted to a flight of 450 ft we’ve got F-35s and F-22 well in this
case F-35s they’re encountering drones at 15,000 ft 70,000 ft
35,000 ft going 500 miles
hour in restricted military airspace meanwhile in the adjacent area and I
included in my PowerPoint briefing you can find uh videos from the Department
of Homeland Security Nderum about some of the strange things that they’re seeing on the
border very very odd things now this raises a little bit of an issue that
I’ve written about recently also um with the hope that that it might
prove some assistance to this task force which is why isn’t the Department of
Homeland Security can publish all these videos but Caro can’t and DoD
can’t there was a a hearing before Congress a few years ago with Mr ray
from the Navy and he said “I assure you I’m going to review these videos and make sure that we get out to you and the
public everything we can.” Um I think maybe there’s been one video in three
years since then uh when I have looked into this and talked to people at different parts of the federal
government and areas of they basically said “Nobody feels it’s their
job to turn this over to the public go wants to make the effort to submit it
for public release so back in 2017 I provided three unclassified
videos to the New York Times you’ve all seen those gimble Fleer Go Fast right
there are a lot more like that they just haven’t been released because shortly after that somebody created the
classification guide which suddenly said in contradiction to the executive order
classification signed by the president that anything essentially anything
having to do with UAP is now suddenly mystically classified because it might
damage national security even though those three videos the FBI the the
office of special uh investigations spearboards investigated confirmed they were in classified not only did they not
damage NASA jury they helped national security they helped raise an awareness
for the public and requires that we have a dare defense problem here and the
scientific community is very eager to get more of those kinds of videos because they want to train AI systems
they want to know what it is we’re looking for they want to measure the signatures there’s a lot they can
contribute to this but the bureaucracy uh is not responding and I think there I
couldn’t put a number on it but I believe that if someone were to to poke
that system and force them to review that classification guide if someone
were to establish some advocacy for taking that which is truly unclassified
and admittedly absolutely there are many things videos that would be our program
is classified not questioning that what I am saying is that there are others that fall into this camp that would have
value to the public value to Congress value to the scientific community and
this is not an expensive proposition it’s just a matter of getting somebody
to focus on it and and put these through the process and uh I think the public
not only has a right to know I think it’s beyond that i think there’s a is
there’s a utilitarian function there’s great value in the public knowing this
information and value to the scientific community in having this
information uh I give the example sometimes of what happened was and I
promise I’m gonna get off the stage real fast um so I’m starting I’m starting to
blow into my own uh uh stereo that I get into but uh the uh this budget program I
have no doubt if they could have kept it secret the CIA would not have told the American Well the Russians had a
satellite at work and we wouldn’t have had the space program when we did we
wouldn’t have got to the moon when we did uh because the people would have gotten fired up and said “Oh my god this
is not acceptable that the Russians are ahead of us and we need to act.” And Congress took action and it was
uh you know it actually ironically we ended up collaborating with the Russians in space and it actually helped from you
know facilitate some peaceful uh developments and relations i think there are a lot of uh benefits along those
lines that uh that they could acrue but it’s going to take some uh
some effort and uh on the part of um uh Congress I think to compel this to
happen if it’s going to happen so with that I will close and thank our
congressional sponsors for taking an interest in this and giving us the opportunity to express
our concerns and uh share what we uh what we’ve learned thus far about this
problem thank you if I second the question this high resolution 4K videos
of UAP is this stuff you know about or is this stuff that you’ve seen well there’s some stuff that I’ve seen and
and uh I’ve asked about and hey there’s one video I’ve seen that they’re going
to declassify and um I hope that happens um it wasn’t for
I was it was 4K it was more like what you’ve seen you know was infrared sensor
gun video along the lines of what the New York Times published in the
Washington Post subsequently uh so it’s that kind of of
video from that sensor system so we know it exists oh yeah yeah yeah and by the
way we are at a point now where the arrow has received
uh somewhere in the neighborhood of 1,800 military
reports 1,800 in just the last two years i some
of those are iPhone videos so I don’t think there’s a big source as an ethics issue there
there’s inahedia at summer from you know you get at best buy and say oh there’s
other ship when the video landed that uh there’s got to be a number in that mix
that could be revealed and uh beyond that as I said I think there’s a lot of
high caliber sensor data the American people weren’t paid for many of these
sensors they’re out there many of them and they’re collecting pertinent data Obvious Dr lois benefited from the data
that had to do with the re-entry of the interstellar vehicle it was a great example of the taxpayer planet system
that contributed to science in a very meaningful way i do hear you tell you I
think there’s a lot more to that kind of thing that could be made available if someone did a thorough assessment of the
sensor systems that we had and what they’re collecting and took a hard look
at classification issues we also had a system a uh precedented ones where we
cleared for global warming scientists to look at some classified data related to
that scientific problem set and that’s conceivably another it has there’s
problems with that because scientists want to be able to publish of course they want their colleagues to be able to
see everything possible about the sources but there are variety of opportunities I think we’re missing at
the same time there’s a huge huge national security issue here and we’ve got stuff in our skies some of it could
represent technologizable surprise that we need to find out about you’ve got these unmanned system
the 35,000 ft that’s a mile higher than top of Mount Everest or 500 miles an
hour in restricted military airspace i would say we go award to you
okay Chris just says I do not have the advantage of height that you do so I
have to bring this way down um I think uh Chris brings up a very
good point and the reason why I decided to share this photograph with you tech from a civilian pilot now is because the
same challenges that our pilots or military pilots are facing as to where
to report it who’s going to analyze it what you do with the information multiply that for the
civilian aviation community do they report to the FAA did they report to Mori maybe to the Air Force a dissert
organization right who’s responsible for getting this information now again roomy caveat this is not embedded uh this was
taken by a civilian pilot but once again you would think this information would be important for
somebody to look at certainly someone in government certainly some some of our representatives that are sitting here
right this these are over sensitive military installations whose are they what are their capabilities what are the
intent right uh but enough of me right now let’s let’s let’s go on to uh our
our second expert here uh Mr kurt
Paw yeah i had a particular old day once again these these guests are just unbelievable uh Kurt my question is for
you and I’m going to go off script here for a minute you have deep expertise and experience with the Senate Armed
Services Committee what is right now the greatest challenge
you see for our Congress to tackle this
topic on behalf of the American people what is it you had to narrow it down to one one to three challenges especially
for our reps here that are sitting with us here today some patiently what would be in your estimate the three greatest
challenges facing Congress to win this top well I I I would uh speculate I’m I’m
not an elected official can you all hear back there no okay let’s do it on that we’re on your left yeah
that um I certainly don’t want to speak for Congress uh you know I I do want to
mention that um I didn’t serve 37 years as a staff member on Cap Hill or Senator
Armed Services Committee and both the House and Senators intelligence committees uh I was not in the military
got that wrong uh but so I’ve been up here a long time but I had no uh voting
card no i have tremendous respect for the institution and I
don’t intend to appeal sort of inside faithful nation uh but uh you know what
I would say is uh on topic like this my sense is that Congress needs a lot of
confidence to push really vigorously and where are they going to
get that confidence that there is an absolute assurance that there’s a a
reality and I think as much evidence as has been accumulated in public domain uh
over such a long period time it is subject to uh to question and you all
know how that has has proceeded over the jury decades um the key to this in my
opinion is firsthand sources who can testify to direct involvement in this
so-called legacy program of uh crash retrievables perverse engineering uh
unfortunately uh there are people out there I I believe from from many
reporters that uh are interested in coming forward and telling their story
but they are very much intimidated and frightened about doing that uh that
they’re afraid of uh of the consequences including their own personal safety is
what they relate their personal safety certainly their career starting with
their security clearances which is the means that they have to make a living um
and they have observed uh some folks uh who have come forward not to mention you
Lou and Dave Rush and have seen uh what those folks had gone through and
most of them say “Yeah I’m not doing that.” U so I think we’re we’re sort of
in a a tough situation it’s almost like uh you know catch 22 uh we need we need
more uh more primary sources uh but it’s hard to get uh people with that kind of
uh that kind of information to come forward because of of the fear of
retaliation we need a better whistleblower question sir that’s uh something that I’m sure as you know
always been discussed in both the senator and the house why aren’t you draw me something up really c yes sir u
so uh whistleblower protections is uh and and you know finding ways to even
uh compensate them if they do have negative consequences for coming forward
uh and so forth so I I certainly uh I certainly think this is uh this is a m a
major a major factor i would just let you ask the
mic on actually Chris please jump yeah so there was uh I keep the period to
address that issue as well and the sorry yeah I can be totally what I could that
had a question as well uh but the classified session was
cancelled on I think due to the sensitivity of the names of the
individuals and and so forth uh
I you know I didn’t think it was appropriate to once I could do it in unclassified setting if they do reschedu
a classified setting I think uh I’m more than happy to try to provide some Here’s
some specifics uh I published a signal message I received from a very senior
government official he described a specific Secretary of the Air Force
memorandum he described a specific recovery site he
describ program uh Lincoln has asked me to follow up on
that i have all that information um you know I was very sure what I could
about that but um I don’t know that it would be defended or ease any inclusion
but uh I do think those names due to you know privacy concerns of the individuals
and so forth obviously it’s sensitive so I’m prepared to try to help with that as
I can as well but in this session I wanted to address uh uh some of these
other issues related to the fruit classification you ask a general question to either of you what are the
consequences and can either look that you can answer or what are the consequences of Congress not taking
action on this topic from a national security perspective
uh well the uh you heard uh Dr uh Eric Davis uh uh
expressing expressing uh uh his understanding of uh the state of affairs
in this uh arena which namely which which is that the program the legacy
program called DAP has uh has uh has been sort of stalled that
uh we’re not uh we’re not making the best use of allegedly we’re not making
the best use of the best minds in the country um the
compartmentalization allegedly has prevented the kind of coordination and
uh collaboration between uh scientists to
really you know practice very difficult set of uh physics problem uh and uh and
there I’m sure that the security uh element that’s had to be applied to this
uh to This uh activity has uh come with a lot of costs in terms of uh
effectively managing the management program and it is alleged that this even
extends uh within the executive branch that very senior uh leaders in the executive branch
aren’t aware of this and are not uh uh you know managing the effort so it it
doesn’t it’s not a leap uh or stretch to to suppose that we’re hampering
ourselves uh immensely by this continued
uh compartmentation um and certainly commerce does not know whether this
activity is being managed appropriate we don’t know if it’s got the right level of resources it’s got
the right management structure the right incentives and so on and so forth um you
know we think our government can work pretty well when we’re when we’re uh managing things according to to rules uh
and uh so I I think that this is uh this is a a detriment to national security
the lack of of oversight and and and and use it’s certainly possible to keep
properly classified things classif and still have an effective oversight and management both in the
executive branch and so on speaking of uh uh keeping
national security and and secrets uh classified which I completely agree with
there are very specific reasons why we want to keep certain aspects of this topic classified sources and methods etc
and certain capabilities but let me ask this question probably for for you uh Mr
melan in your opinion what are the Conor
Valley well I because uh the fact I’m not wearing a
tie have to make up for a summer i’ve already been
accumulating trying to be more formal here chris uh in your opinion what are the consequences of retroactively
classifying information previously unclassified and are you aware of any
specific incidents of information or data that was what’s unclassified that
is now classified well as I mentioned earlier though I I
think there’s piles of that stuff and I think there’s so much of it that it’s
kind of hard to gauge what the cods are because uh my understanding is that they
adopted the classification guide which basically says anything and everything to do in the
UAP is classified here for now people who haven’t read the executive order may
not be aware the executive order says when in doubt you should heir on the
side of going unclassified it airs you’re supposed to
heir on the side of transparency and openness to the American people and when
we’re talking about many of these videos uh if an F18 atclear prioting pod video
is unclassified in 2017 and we’re not talking about denied area or some other
usual exception how could it be classified two years when you take the same video from
the same system in the same area two years later i don’t get it but that
looks like what they did and the avoid is typically and I I argued viferously
against it at the time i knew some of the people involved and tried to make the argument that guys you wouldn’t even
be here would be having a discussion if information hadn’t got
into the public domain via Congress and the press and
that’s why we made the progress we made today and now you want to drop a turtle on everything what do you you know what I
don’t get it so uh I can’t really gauge the the implications but I do think
they’re make and I think it’s it’s inappropriate i think it’s probably unlawful
uh my last question here before we move uh to a very short break for the next panel i want to be respectful of time
both the congressional members and of course uh our panelists as well this next question goes to you Kirk
um you mentioned a little bit about whistleblowers and I know that gang um
and you don’t have to talk about but I know you received classified briefings before on this topic from specific
subject matter experts and some of your colleagues what can Congress do
specifically men such as Rep Burlson Repched Runa their colleagues to better
protect whistleblowers to incentivize individuals to come forward
and provide at a minimum unclassified information in a way that they don’t
have to worry about retribution to their careers perhaps much worse and
classified information in the proper value what what can Congress do to to
help improve that flow of information and minimize the deprisals that some of us have have faced in the past
uh Lou I would uh I would first off like to say that uh that uh there is a an
option like people who do come forward and want to talk to uh committees in
Congress don’t have to go public um they can and have uh come to the armed
services committees the intelligence committees and uh uh in in confidence on
a classified basis related in what they know and what their experience has been
um uh the members who have who proceeded
that kind of uh stos and and uh witness statements uh
have protected the identity of of such people and they have
uh they had thereby been protected um the the the uh negative side of that
is that the members uh can’t go around and tell their colleagues uh uh what
they they have learned because that’s uh that risks the identity of the people
that come forward in confidence and therefore it doesn’t it doesn’t empower
members to then uh uh procilitize and and get everyone uh geared up to really
make a strong investigator Tory Kush uh but it is an it is an option uh for for
people to consider uh I would also say that uh we have a gentleman here in the
audience who has uh uh conducted a oh
legal uh history of uh people who uh
come forward to make uh classified uh statements to Congress over long period
of time and uh he tells me that uh he
can’t find an instance where someone coming forward and getting a classified
information to Congress without sort of formal uh permission from the executive
branch that there’s never been uh and I hope I’m getting this right there’s never been an indictment or much less a
prosecution for doing that uh now I I certainly I’m a lawyer i certainly does
want to encourage people to uh to sort of break the rules as they see as they
understand them and what they’re bound to by agreements that they sign but it
is at least something to think about um and uh and eventually act on that
obviously takes a lot of courage to do that i just like to this is a low debon
sector but our panel’s coming to an end and I I did want to make a share a concern on you after you said we have
two different issues here we have UAP objects that you’re observing uh in
flight acting around military etc we had an issue of of possible recovery of of
materials uh these two issues in the public mind are blended it’s entirely
impossible that we might not have recovered materials but UAP are very real and here a blessing and it’s an
urgent issue and I had a concern that if that issue is not in some way validated
or addressed it was the risk to discrediting the entire topic and we’ve
made enormous progress uh nothing happened in the essentially
from blue book days until 2017 and I I fear that if there isn’t
some uh effective way of addressing this that we run the risk of of a major
setback i don’t know how secure arrow is in the long term i’m not seeing interest
on the part of the chairman of the committees that fund it on your armed
services and intelligence committees they don’t seem to be engaged or supportive at this point for defensive
probe so I think we’re in somewhat tenuous ground perk might be just probably in better position to address
this than me but I think that a second falls medic from Rurick in front of it
and how do you manage that who deals with that it’s such a transformational
issue that it cannot be a press release that comes out of from a you know from
from Congress some afternoon at uh Friday afternoon or something it’s a
literally cosmic dissue that runs the risk of having a terrifying tens of
millions hundreds of millions of people grab it so it’s a very complex interrelated set of issues and uh I
think we we and whoever side of this like really needs
to think through how to handle the two of those things and uh our foundation
obviously wants to help him um why I don’t but I think there’s a tough
challenge for members who are very very busy people with a lot on their plates
and the complex mode i’m I’m going to make an exception here i’m going to continue this conversation because there’s a question I want to ask you
very related to with their expertise go back Kirk well I I wanted to uh get to
the question that you actually asked were you just about whistleblower protections and I’m uh by no means uh an
expert or even really conversant uh on the topic of uh whistleblower
protections uh but um you know applying common sense kind of standard uh you
know you need to you need to have uh we need to have
legislation that uh that really is strong uh you know there’s a long record
of whistleblowers despite whistleblower protections in the law uh they get
retali and they they lose their jobs they lose their careers and
uh it happens with enough regularity that no one could blame people for not
one not one capis so the legislation would need to be would need to be very robust and I
think it would need to include things like restitution possibility of uh of of
uh the government making good on the loss of loss of their career loss of
security clearances if it comes to that and uh and and making uh you know m
making sure that uh that people are not going to uh you know uh suffer these
consequences um even though the law said they should never have suffered such consequence you
got you got clean up the mess uh that that that tends to happen
um so anyway I uh I out myself with So
one last question i know you said it before i’m going to again break the rule here real quick but I’m going to ask you very quickly was try to for Ken’s big
question but try to keep 16 to pretend uh Minister Belfie and and I think uh this is part
of the challenge that Congress faces okay so you have we all want to protect national security how do you
separate protecting blue force technologies perhaps perhaps hypothetically gained from the insights
of UAP recovery programs but at the same time leveling with the American people about the
reality the fundamental reality that is we a we do not have a current understanding of everything air sky
right about US air domain awareness but you don’t have a complete sight picture and J that there may be
technologies that are not from us and um that warrant further investigation but
yeah but at the same time protecting if we have any technologies hypothetically
that have been developed as a result well um Lou you know uh we heard from Dr
davis that and and many others who believe that we haven’t made much progress uh in in with respect to
deciphering what the physics are behind uh NHI and these craft they’re coming
here uh at the same time I we don’t really know that that’s true we haven’t
admitted props maybe we make grape products and and that we have stuff
ourselves that that could be uh that could be pretty marvelous right um and
certainly there can be absolutely vital uh reasons for protecting that kind of
information um I mean one thought that is is crossed my mind is uh uh you know
people say you know the United States government has been into this Why in the world wouldn’t the government
have uh made these kinds of technologies known for the betterment of our citizens
and remain common and you know one thought is like what what if it what if
once you understand the science what if the engineering I know uh Eric Davis thinks
that we’re you know we’re maybe a thousand years from up to able to do this but but what if that’s uh what if
it’s not true and you know the government is on the horns of a dilemma like it’s got energy sources that might
be an absolute boon to mankind but it also is looking at the weaponization of that and it’s terri terrifying um and so
you know gee is there a way that you could exploit that for your own benefit militarily but keeping this
uh keeping this thing somehow this genie bottled up where it doesn’t uh come into
the hands of a of a North Korean dicty um so uh I I don’t have answers i uh Lou
I think uh I think you’ve got to deal with this uh this range of uh of u of
possibilities but the first thing you got to do is understand like we have to we have to understand what the
government knows and until we do it’s going to be hard to develop a ration
strategy for managing this uh I don’t know captain Hill has risk bucks uh I
don’t think they’ll I think they manage it uh Alita that is too much
already i’d be eager to get off the stage and turn it over to All right folks three minutes thank you very much
for that
…
Enhanced Audio YouTube Transcript Part Three
in my group So first folks uh let me first extend my
sincere appreciation and thanks for everyone’s patience Uh as you can see we could probably stay all day with just
one panelist alone Lots to discuss We are barely scratching the surface here
Um the next discussion is really going to be part of a scientific discussion
And so the two panels you have here are experts in their own fields uh and and
recognized uh as a as a global leader in their particular expertise So what I’d
like to do first is introduce is Anna Ray Estes founding partner at American
DTEK former uh SBA innovation advisor for Kaufman Coffman fellow and uh on the
UABF advisory board But what you may not know is that uh this Ry Estz is deeply
involved with the National Science Foundation Um and that involvement
really includes looking at pioneering new ways to invest American talent
scientific talent into new and emerging areas of science
Where do we where do we decide to put our money and our effort in the next 20 years Where do we get that return on
investment What does that look like Right And how do we how do we force ourselves to think outside the box to to
be creative Don’t invent tomorrow’s technology Invent the technology after
tomorrow And is that type of creative thinking that has traditionally kept
this country ahead of everybody else And uh I ask you to what she when
she speaks um listen to what she has to say because
this isn’t my thing this is the future not just at this topic but any topic requiring innovation if you don’t
innovate you stagnate if you don’t stagnate you perish that’s just the bottom line right the competitive work
the next individual is a uh colleague and friend of mine Mr Mike Gold Mr from
Mike Gold is present uh the civil and international space uh at
Redwater member of the NASA UAP independent study team former NASA
associate administrator for space policy and partnerships former acting associate administrator for the office of
international and inter agency relations and senior adviser to the administrator for international and legal affairs
former vice president for civil space at Maxar Technologies former director of GC
operations and business group at the Globe Aerospace You might be remember that work from somewhere else and that
and last but certainly not least uh as a uh member of NASA uh am I correct to say
a a mission manager uh with the Ardin team Is that did I get that right
Because I’ve done two things wrong so far today So I want to make sure you’re right I’m a recovering attorney They wouldn’t let me close the deping So I
was the architect of the ardinance cores however the global partnership of 54 countries exploring mears and be
excellent and that is it right explore explore moon moon bars and beyond um
there is a uh something for you there was an estimate done that uh the future
of man mankind our species uh is not here In fact if you were to look at the
financial opportunities it was estimated that 1 times 10 to the 18th 18th power
amount of money is this this world has ever made globally in all its time as
modern civilization Multiply that by a factor of 18 and that’s the value of the
resources that lie within the inner asteroid belt resources Oh right So so
the future is there As a microbiologist there’s one primary directive for all eye systems as we know
and that’s to expand If you expand you will perish In fact you can look at
petri dish If you put the right amount of nutrients bacteria will do the same Take a plant give it nutrients and water
it will grow and take over That is the primary director of all life And we are
no exception to that So keep that in mind as these individuals are talk to
you uh about uh about the importance of this topic the UAP topic and how it relates to the scientific community Um
am I you’ve spacing that you have a your presentation for so I like to just turn it over uh first of all welcome our two
guests our esteemed guests and uh ma’am did you have
presentation and going to do the just questions and answers I’ll go verbal Yeah Okay Mike come on up and let’s uh
get you start Thanks so much Is it okay with my boo here Yeah Yeah Great Sure It’s like terms of expansion I can tell
you my doctor says I’m expanding far too That’s you too Yeah You know lot of trouble Thank you so much Blue Not only
for today but for all you have done to push top You are an American hero and as well as the congressman and many others
in this room You know the journalists the scientists the advocates pilots it
is just an honor to be here I appreciate what everyone has done Also thank you repar directors blending out of the
meeting early That was a wonderful discussion I think this is going to be a lot more exciting If I could point you
to my opening slide that is actually image taken by the blue ghost lunar lander with redwire artist cameras I’m
going to get in why that is such an extraordinary image in a moment But before we get there uh we were having a
discussion about substances and what these new substances look like new
materials what this UAD technology would be And I’ve been getting the challenging if not on an end of the task of saying
how could UAP technology impact innovation without knowing quite what that UAP technology is uh even
fundamentally So what I’d like to try and do today is give you an example of how
microgravity is impacted innovation and really almost every industrial field and
how that could be transformative I don’t know if extraterrestrial civilizations are using this I think they likely would
be but I think this is an example of how a fundamental shift in technology could change everything Uh our company Redwire
has been conducting experiments on the International Space Station on the space show for literally decades We have flown
hundreds of experiments uh over the past 35 plus years We have 11 experiments
active on the International Space Station right now more than any other company You see Senator Jonathan Lynn
running one of our experiments there The first one I’d like to show you is the biofabrication facility BFF We’re great
at appreire If you could play Veo please This is by the way an over 400 pound
payload in room table at our facility in Greenville Indiana Much easier to handle
in orbit That astronaut at a cup span where he very quickly collect coffee at 20 times speed Uh but he’s installing
what is a biofabrication unit And that system has
allowed us to manufacture human tissue in space It resulted in the first human
meniscus being printed in space Who needs a
miniscus You probably use two deer Exactly This is the impact of micro If
you try to create that meniscus on Earth I think I recovering attorney so I can put it simply it squishes You could do
that in gravity environment It’s not space per se It’s the lack of gravity that allows you to do these incredible
things uh subsequent to the success we had with the meniscus we printed live
cardiovascular tissue and we brought it back from the International Space
Station still alive Think what this could mean for people suffering from
heart disease the creation of heart patches And of course the goal of all of this is ultimately to create whole
organs in space How many of us have had friends and relatives die while waiting
on an organ donation Looks this could change all of that Additionally because
we would be using your own stem cells to create the tissue the organs we would avoid the dangerous and expensive
anti-rejection therapies that you go through So we see how microgravity could have a dramatic impact in terms of life
sciences Also pharmaceuticals Redwire has flown 28 pill boxes These are
systems where we take pharmacy drugs fly the seed crystals and seed crystals by
the way they’re like sourdough starting kit They’re what the drugs are made out of And when you create sea crystals and
microgravity they’re larger more uniform and that results in drugs with better
efficacy better tip fewer side effects Here’s a example that is very near and
dear to my heart Insulin We partnered with UI Lily We flew insulin Over on the
left side of that that’s what insulin seed crystals look like in Ukraine on Earth Over on the right side that’s what
insulin looks like in space The seed crystals Again I got a B minus in biology as a high school student Even I
can tell the difference between one and the other And because of those larger more beautiful fistals do get out a
version of insulin we’ve seen versions of cancer treatment drugs that whereas you have to go from chemotherapy that
would be injected again long painful you could potentially get to a version of the drug where it could be administered
warl so a tremendous difference here relative to pharmaceutical sector and by
the way it’s not just us your elders it’s China and the Chinese have their space station they’re going after the
same research So every time Congressman Bidens will look at the international space station replacing it with
commercial space station this revolution with biotech and microgravity is going to happen The only question is it going
to happen here in Maratha the free world or is it going to be happening in China and I do not want to be buying my next
generation pharmaceuticals drugs from the Chinese So we need to continue to support this and create new developments
but this is just like sciences of biotech You get micro grab lip pack semiconductors The same principles When
you throw crystals in space you can create new types of semiconductors that are more powerful more tolerant of heat
Agriculture you can create seeds new types of plants that can flourish in the
desert We have a a greenhouse that we’re flying in space looking at many of that efforts You see that there Uh we also
have systems with what’s called ZLAN fiber whereas new tech fiber optic that could be incredibly more powerful again
at every aspect of our technological society could be changed by this innovation Is this something that UAP
are using Is this new substances that they’re using I don’t know perhaps But you see how this field will
revolutionize everything And I believe in the future the leaders in my congrat
will not only be the leaders in economics but in national security as well As a matter of fact that meniscus
sprint the customer for that was the uniformal services university is number one injury to our men and women uniform
are meniscus stickers Now I’d like to talk about who wants to see some
unclassified data right let’s talk about some imagery that we’re getting from NASA As Lou mentioned I was proud to be
a member of NASA’s UAP independent study team We had some very common sense
recommendations One of which that I testified here in the house not to
side of Greg Dzando and others was that we need to go into the NASA archives get
the imagery review it make it public and look at what we’ve got This is an
example that hit the internet not too long ago Is it Tic Tac It’s on Mars I
don’t know I’m not qualified to say but someone should be looking at it or we should be collecting and calling the
data Here’s one that’s even more interesting to me Lunar horizon glow
This is a phenomena that we first saw with the surveyor systems This is a glow that we’re seeing on the
horizon of the moon We saw it with the robotic surveyors of what you see and the overlapping side are sketches that
Apollo astronauts made of this phenomena A glowing dome streaks of light shooting
out from the lunar surface Pretty extraordinary And then most recently
this was my cover spy with the blue ghost system which is NASA’s corion payload
services a wonderful public private partnership to reach the moon with the
red wire Argus cameras We took this image of the lunar horizon
glow What you might hear uh if you go on a NASA website or talk the sun in the scientific community is that this effect
is from dust that has been electrostatically charged and then
levitated to create this impact Now again I’m not saying one way the other
but um Dr should go back to get him credit
Uh Dr Manich I’m gonna I’m gonna mess up his name I apologize It’s in the slides but
a wonderful professor who’s been associating UAB disclosure fund uh and doing work on this topic quietly in
these slides And I can tell you NASA’s own research lad other systems is
putting some big question marks as to even if there is enough dust to create this event which looks unlikely and that
if dust could be electrostatically charged to cause what I mean looks like a second sunrise and that’s not the sun
by the way it’s below a horizon I mean that is an extraordinary imaging and by the way
when I first saw this picture was like stat algae on the moon and what you’re
seeing is light reflect refraction occurring due to I don’t know what So I
don’t know what this is Is it a dome Is it some type of natural phenomena that
we don’t understand or aren’t aware of But I’ll tell you definitely it’s a unidentified and nonless phenomena which
bears nothing and bears understanding and this is good example too of even if it’s a natural or prosaic
phenomena there’s something extraordinary occurred here we should be delicate we should be studying it and
understanding and on the off chance that does turn out to be something extraordinary I mean we need to know
what is occurring here Uh additionally here’s another shot publicly available
from the NASA archives You’ve seen some imagery of the triangular UAVs in the
past What’s that Debris satellites That’s for the moon
right What That’s Apollo 17 We had that picture Images for Apollo 17 A few of us saw
something like that uh last Friday Yeah Extraordinary Sabos Cleon What is it I
don’t know Do you know arm You know what that is Why are we not investigating this And
what I would ask of our brave members of Congress would here is again with
relatively little effort and money we should be leveraging AI and ML to go
into the NAS archives So much of this has been digitized more every day and conduct a review of what’s possibly
available on Eur We spend so much time here justifiably so talking about
classified material what’s being hidden Yet there is a treasure trove of data
that if not a smelly gun certainly is fascinating and worthy looking at and
applying the scientific method to And these images that you’re seeing here and
here’s more of another UAP from Paul or more of potentially Stonehenge strange
structures on the winter anomalies that look like Buddhist temples I’m not
saying necessarily all of these have extraordinary explanations Maybe some of them don’t or maybe some of them do but
it certainly is worth the effort to investigate And we’re not doing that
right now Why Because of the stigma this pernicious stigma that prevents us from
tap it And sir that’s where Ordelia need their help that I have many friends at NASA They’re interested in this doc need
to fight what del into it but they need top cover And that’s why I was so grateful to be on top more about what we
could do either as administrator coming in and this isn’t going to cost a lot of money Yeah This could be done with very
little time very little effort get the results could be extraordinary Finally
as we get back to technology I just wanted to level set relative to what it takes to travel in space Three days to
the moon 7 to 10 months to Mars I can tell you exposure to radiation very bad
trip Quite dangerous and challenging 77,000 years to pox centuri our closest
star I mean that’s worse than my flight I’m rough And then 1.7 million years to
get to where we need some biosures for the first time We’re truly going to explore space we’re going to need some
innovative technology And here we already spent some time discussing the alocub warp tribe This was a Mexican
physicist He did the initial work proving that within demonstrate science
and correct I defer to Eric Davis here but but this is not extraordinary science that the warp drive could exist
The challenge with Alib’s warp drive is that it would require roughly the mass
of Jupiter converted into energy to operate I mean I had a Chevy Suburban
and that was not fuel efficient This would be even more difficult But a
scientist at NASA what was then NASA’s Eagle Works tweaked basically the architecture of the alub it worked at
and perhaps found some ways to get that thousand more the mass of a BW you know
something that we could work with So these are the kinds of technologies that if there is a ribbon exic system or some
kind of extraordinary technology we must have it in board reverse those distances
and have America and our international partners lead in space exploration
Additionally energy I mean if we are sitting on extraordinary technology zero
point energy the casemir effect as we discussed think of the good we could do
in terms of saving the environment improving the economy creating a post
scarcity society It would be extraordinary It would be wonderful And let me just end by saying the reverse of
that is we do not want to fall behind China relative to leveraging
extraordinary technology I don’t know if there’s alien tech out there maybe There
might not be But can we risk falling behind the Chinese and reverse engineer
if there is such ethnology And this is again that the stigma is so pernicious
that I’m sure as its top officials working on this 247 coordinated whereas us separated as
compartmentalized MIT working on it is Caltech working on it No we cannot risk
losing communist China because we can’t take this issue serious
We must not let a lack of vision turn into a lack of freedom Thank you
All right Well thank you for the uh brief presentation folks Um again time is of the essence so I’m going to make
these uh as succinct as possible if I pres that all Yeah absolutely I’d like you to present that and I was actually
questions actually about that So please have a four Uh well I just wanted to say I really appreciate Mike all the work
you’ve done in microgravity and and certainly for you know any of these craft that are both you know that are in
space above the caric they have that access to microgravity should they choose to use it uh at our firm American
deep tech we’re very focused on a number of areas of deep technology including space tech energy and advanced flight
including one of our co-founders cat with vaspera they believe identified a cancer kill switch and I know you work
together We’re talking with her Yeah It’s cancer kill switch in microgravity So just you know for pharmaceuticals
that access to microgravity you see the aging within 9 days and it didn’t take a
year terrestrially for a tumor So that ability to speed up that iteration on
drug development is very important So we’ve got some some really interesting people that we work with a CTO coming
out of NASA a branch chief uh coming out of Space Score some very high growth
entrepreneurs and we also work uh with some leaders you know as our advisers and venture partners in the UAP space
because we see the keys you know of these areas of technology to drive that abundance that competitive advantage you
know and just societal benefit so people like we’re you know we’re fortunate to have as our adviser Hal Kouta uh and
also to work with people like uh Julia Mosbridge and Ryan Graves and Diane
Finchen So I I know that they are active in so many areas of technology uh but
also in UIP and so how did we come in my former roles which which I thank you so
much for that kind introduction which I I’ve completed my roles in the US government where I was the co-chair
alongside NASA of the US space economy inter agency working group we work with
exceptional innovation forward UAP forward and open leaders across the
inter agency And those meetings are public They’re available online US space disruptors day and that was a day of
about uh you know 10 sometimes 12 hours of presentations on in space
biotechnology in space semiconductors US launch uh also UAP
also advanced consciousness AI communications and satellites So there
was uh actually inter agency leadership on that co co-hosted this UAP leaning
content from NASA Space Force
DOE DHHS Air Force these were all very senior people um NSF and SBA So while I
would say uh that in years past before this great movement towards transparency gratitude for those in the room who have
really led that um you know since the 2017 time frame and before time has
changed and innovation is not about unfortunately because we we want
everybody to come along you know we we appreciate you know it’s great once you get beyond 50% Innovation and science
are not about consensus This isn’t we don’t wait to get to 51% This is the the the leaders are are
doing this The fast followers are also doing this And the the reasons why
they’re doing this is because they’re sitting in rooms groups of people We had an extended electronamics group of uh
leaders from across the inter agency and also the private sector and they were
working on advanced energy They were working on advanced communications They
there are funded entrepreneurs I uh at full NSF public awards we funded and I
funded companies working on what the entrepreneurs later described as UAPJ
said or UAP inspired technologies uh one of those actually multiple of
those people have spoken having worked on uh programs that they can’t go into great depth about but certainly others
are undertaking that private sector research where it’s not about it being
classified first and this uh but the point on how do you how do you get your
communications uh back in court to marks you know without dealing with the
40minute latency how do you do that and what are what are the approaches for breaking those barriers How do you
achieve this energy abundance and and now more efficient launch capability So
it was these conversations on what could be achieved and what’s already been in some cases declassified in terms of uh
worked and outcomes or was never classified really led to conversations or we invited in experts who then said
do you want my my extended electronamics uh presentation or you want my UA key
presentation we said you know we’d like both of those and so that what that led to was receiving that tremendous
presentation uh from Hal from Charles Chase and from others and saying
actually uh can can you give this to more people and so they gave that those
types of presentations u to hundreds of people and what we found with those
entrepreneurs was this was the highest level of engagement we ever got in any
fields of science or technology I see people in the audience who are part of it shaking their heads Yes So the
entrepreneurs were so eager and scientists to engage in the UAP uh
science and technology and as a frame of reference when we talk about disruptive technology I’ve worked with a few of
them because I’ve had the opportunity to fund around 400 companies to work with thousands of entrepreneurs those
companies from just a quarter billion a quarter billion plus put out have gone
on to raise 8.5 billion in fall one financing and 17.5 billion ion in total
market cap just in the early years That’s coming out of a place that the program which is not the UAP program but
a program that has catalyzed well over 350 billion dollars you know from well
less than 20 probably 12 billion put out over several decades So these entrepreneurs often times these highest
growth ones regardless of what they’re working in it can be batteries they’re
told never going to work or you will have batteries right people will say higher performing battery here’s why
it’s not going to work so these entrepreneurs are used to being told no and why not and they still built things
and what’s happening today not just in America but around the world because the first time I saw these experiences was
overseas is people are seeing ultra advanced craft that are higher
performing And for people that are building the highest performing craft and the highest performing energy they
are not trying to unsee what they have seen you know and that they caught on a a wide range of sensors There is the
classified sensors and then there’s the sensors like this We have imagery you
know on our phones uh from going out and and seeing things So I think that the uh
the impetus to build things is what’s driving this and what would be the right
levels to really go after this You know this is something that a few of us have spoken about but uh my background is
also as a strategist so we we do a lot of strategy now and uh I used to be at
BCG and the question of if you’re building the highest performing systems
what type of resources would you put in place so if we look at you know we and
I’m I’m sharing kind of casually Google numbers so you get we can get to better definition but how much money went into
the ISS our long-term inspace laboratory Some of the numbers online made that it
was well over 70 billion for the US part of that and that with other nations
contributions it might be 150 billion What was the cost of the Apollo program
That was 26 billion you know uh you know from the ’60s to the ‘7s Uh some
estimates put that at inflation adjusted well well over 200 perhaps $250 billion
So if you were to ask me today what is the right amount of money to be
investing in these ultra high performing technologies these Manhattan style
projects It’s well into the hundreds of billions of dollars That’s the right
answer today Whether the US makes that investment or whether somebody else does
we are talking about advantage for multi-trillion dollar markets So some
would say perhaps we made the right investments over time that we’ve invested those tens of billions of those
hundreds of billions And if we have how do we celebrate the accomplishments that
might come out of those programs How do we give the recognition to those scientists those people who have served
who perhaps have not been able to speak about their work How do we derive value
from that How do we say these pieces that might have been constrained because you didn’t have access to the tools
everybody else has access to on the outside and the collaboration how can we bring the pieces in in a way that is
respectful to national security and increases resilience and and abundance
And I I am concerned I mean I I appreciate it I think many of us want
transparency but also how do we make that so people who may have worked in this want to come forward you know so if
we’re offering them oh you built something you give the resources and here’s some punishment that that’s going
to be hard to get the technology out How you know and there’s lots of ways that that could be brought fully it could be
anonymized into a centralized clearing house If there is valuable technology
there that can help people in the United States and around the world let’s celebrate what’s been built and let’s build the gaps that are there So we see
tremendous opportunity Uh the race is on Some would say those are exceptionally
uh large programs Uh many of us have seen these this wide range of phenomena
be they craft be they orbs these the reason it matters So sometimes the first
time you see this phenomena it’s a point of interest and you say wow you know I
kind of thought there was light bulb planet whether it’s light bulb planet or advanced terrestrial technology but you
you’d think well okay interesting now back to our dayto-day what do we do with this and so a number of us came to
because our core roles were advanced energy advanced computation advanced biology the answer was people who are
working in their core fields of biotechnology ology quantum that they’re seeing some of the potential cast
forward through this UAP adjacent technology Can we classify it today I
don’t know how I mean there are parts that we can say stay away from this due to this risk But the challenge on some
of this is if if you’re to say we’ll classify UAP technology you just got to
stop working on it For people that are familiar with the science and the technology there are elements of this
that are relevant to quantum and quantum entanglement So what does that mean for our national posture on quantum AI is
interwoven with this You talk about microgravity and advanced materials So
do we just not do certain layering or advancement of certain materials because they’ve been found at a crash retrieval
We are not able to walk back because this is so interwoven So saying that UAP
is off limits That’s like saying let’s go home Let’s you know maybe can we still use fire You know maybe you know
let’s look into it you know can you still use rocks So many of the fields of technology would be off limits So
honestly we don’t know how to to you know this idea we don’t once you’re in that you don’t even know it’s like
saying stop using math So the entrepreneurs are getting inspired They’re seeing things and and so this is
kind of humorous to scientists So we both appreciate that people are talking about crash retrievals and reverse
engineering Are there crash retrievals Well are there crashes I mean there’s deer retrievalss where I live I mean a
crash seems a lot more interesting than a deer to pick up And uh anybody who
knows an engineer says the first time you see anything of interest you certainly going to reverse engineer it
So whether that happens inside government programs or whether it happens out of the streets Americans and
people around the world are seeing this phenomena and uh those that build things are saying you know what do we build
together So we we’ve seen these on a number of occasions We brought some high ranking uh scientists down to folks who
were able is in spots where these show up more frequently And uh it’s worth
noting that there are people a number of groups of people who are currently
pulling in or attracting craft you know and other phenomena And some some people
just happen to see them I’m looking around and you saw a lot of these but um so there are people that see these
infrequently There are people who have seen these on a dayto-day basis when
we’ve spoken with scientists you know over the past year or two And so this is this is coming out of places that some
would see as the scientific establishment and can can we talk with us Can we not you know it’s all these
conversations hadn’t taken place as openly When they did what we found was
well we go into rooms and we talk with people who are innovators they’re usually it’s usually 30 to 50% of people
will share that they’ve seen or experienced an almost phenomenon You know sometimes I say “Oh no I hadn’t
seen a UAP.” And then they say “Well you know I did see this orb over a football field and you know it was huge.” And
then so people have seen things and we had to have the conversation with
leaders in science where we said “By the way times have changed There’s all this great work that’s been done towards
disclosure.” And when we started talking to people about it where we might have thought it was one in 20 or one in a 100
seems like it’s more like one in three or two and three or maybe three and three and three people are talking about
it and um so that so we’ve had the conversation which is it is not credible
or viable to act like this isn’t going on So it’s it’s a little we use the
analogy that it’s a little bit like whale watching It’s both normal to if you live by the coast whole length
certainly but if you live by the coast you have access to get out of the water you know there’s a percentage of people
who would have seen whales there’s a percentage who’d have it it’s normal both ways So nothing to feel like you
know special or not special you know regardless but it’s ubiquitous So if you
can’t go in front of a room of people you know if you’ve seen that and it’s
cred and if you hadn’t seen it we said listen people are seeing this they know So to be credible you duty to
acknowledge it’s out there There’s so much data There’s so much people have on their iPhones You know there’s so many
people who will speak to the programs on the high side they’re in but the low side you know is not waiting for
agreement They’re not the fortune one The US government can lead this we can
try to figure out what benefit we have from the great work people in this country and perhaps around the world have done or people are ready to move
forward and uh when I was in government I used to receive proposals I without
going into the details in any of them you know in various fields of technology do people think they were the only no
any idea you have believe me dozens of people were working at the same time so this is something that right now you
both in this country around the world there There are so many people that are being here to build this and a number of
them are already building these things up So just because you don’t see it doesn’t mean that it isn’t happening all
over the place both in this country and abroad So if we need to lead if we want to lead we need to be active So I’m I’m
looking we always listen with respect to innovators and entrepreneurs and I want to thank so many of you for sharing what
you’ve seen Uh there is an opportunity I I I expect more scientists are going to be engaging directly with the phenomena
and as scientists they’re going to be doing experiments and and methods Okay So you want to talk about something that
people talk even less about than UAPs So the the thing that was even more
of a third rail than UAPs is the sources and methods for some of it So as you’re
hearing about there’s number of teams that are working calling this phenomena and they’re talking about all these different things Some of them have these
okay ultra exotic protocols And then one of the one of the groups that we went to
visit with some scientists Their protocol was prayer And it was not some
exotic thing It was the Our Father the Hail Mary you know conversation And I’m not trying to constrain it to any any
denomination or any fake or lack thereof because it I think one of the hesitencies people have is they don’t
they want this to be for everybody and not uh not to be specific or linked to
one thing but source of the methods when we’re talking science there are people through meditation or very you know
dayby-day prayer calling in these crafts you know and these orbs So uh it’s science let’s talk about what it is and
then assess it
open So my first question actually is to you Anna Um so there was a recent
statement by a government official and it kind of went unnoticed I think it was a few weeks ago where they said we are
now regulating space time We have the ability to mitigate space time So I’ll
let that sink in for a moment that was an official statement by a US government
representative He can elaborate on that Well there’s certainly been uh publicly visible funding that has gone into that
And um I I’ll say a couple things before I would say there’s a a much better expert in the audience uh Dr Julia
Mossbridge in terms of uh space-time work Uh also that’s something that Dr
Hal Gout with space-time metric engineering has been very active in Uh so so but plenty of work on that and uh
there there’s a lot that’s going on So the backdrop of that the National
Science Foundation has been under Oh and sorry just one quick thing to say But by the way uh we we also a few of us were
also maybe several of us in the room about over a year ago were on uh the National Mall at the National Academy of
Sciences where it was National Space Week And there were some uh presenters from around the world and that also
included a representative uh from the Chinese government or presumably CCP and
the presentation that they were putting up included requests for we want to work
with people on I believe it was space-time metric engineering uh it was
gravitational control and it was also alien life on planet amongst other
things like renew renewables So the Chinese are literally coming down to the
National Mall and saying hi come talk to us about this you know and
so come on seriously another thing that they said by the way you know in terms
of many of us have been advocating for much higher levels of capital to go into
innovation and also into inspace infrastructure which does not have access to the terrestrial financial
tools like debt Yes So if you buy the house most people they’re making a smaller down payment 20% 5% whatever
they could do more of a minimum in space it’s typically you’ve got to front all of the money up front Can you you’re not
going to build a hospital for the individual patient You need to have the financial model So anyways when I was
trying to figure out what was the space budget for China they wouldn’t tell me But um the the gentleman didn’t look at
me and disdain and know he’s talking to all of you He said “Well we look at putting up a space
station We view that as that cost the same amount of money as putting down a couple kilometers of metro.” Basically
we’re going to do that all day every day So if we can’t figure out how to make the investments to win in
these transformational markets for abundance for societal benefits and for
economic growth and gain uh we’re going to be left behind So this is a so the people that are moving forward are
moving forward We really hope that the u the US government fortune one um you
know is able to share some of the great work that’s been done you know previously across all these fields but
the private sector is moving forward folks we’re going to have time only two very quick questions we’re
already way over our time and we have to unfortunately surrender this room back over to folks so let me finish I’ve got
two here and then afterward that you want to y uh we’re not going to have time to open up right now for for public questions I
have uh let me get to this real quick and if we could our guest could please keep um the answer as sin as possible Uh
before we actually get to other room um let me start with with you an
um the National Science Foundation has been a fundamental pillar of some of America’s revolutionary technology and
concepts for many decades How can the NSF help the government now concerning
the topic of UABs Well I guess one of the things that’s just publicly visible is that we have
been uh when I was formerly at NSF uh I would just say that there’s lots of publicly visible content of us being
very uh forward on the topic listening to innovators working with strong
colleagues from across the inter agency So I I think that uh NSF has shown and
NSF leadership has also just been extremely supportive So I just want to be very clear I left the government
because I’m excited about building things in the private sector and I only ever received the greatest support and
collaboration from my inter agency colleagues and from the agencies with which I worked who are extremely forward
on all areas of innovation but certainly UAP fits within that including our
publicly visible awards that were made to uh fund UAP science There are plenty
there’s great people that are highway supportive you particularly open very
encouraging thank you Mike um last question you were on the NASA UAP
independent study team my question for you is what were the recommendations of the NASA UAP independent study team and
how those recommendations how should those recommendations be implemented for the
purpose of time of that I’ll book us on to uh those recommendations We already
discussed going through the NASA archives with an AI ML system to get the
date just a few examples of which you were able to show today again which could be quite extraordinary can be at
their companies and we even volunteer to do that work for NASA But the second one and I really appreciate you showing that
photo which was taken by a commercial pond And one of the great disappointments I had when I was on the
UAP Ed study team was I was asking the FAA how many reports have you gotten
your bios Are those reports P archives How are we keeping track of that And I
got P fusion confusion and no straight answers And here I’d like to give credit to Ryan Grazy again uh for suggesting
that we leverage NASA’s aviation safety recurring system ASRS which has been
operating for decades as hundreds of thousands of cases and this is a confidential system where pilots crew
can call in that safety anomalies that they’ve experienced It’s worked
phenomenally We should be leveraging this system for the reporting of U8 It
could be done quickly It could be done efficiently and the amount of data that
we will receive would be amazing Additionally the images that I showed you was from Dudu the commercial neoplot
service program Public private partnerships have driven all of this I’m so excited for the democratization of
space and the data that we will get from that This was just one example today As
SpaceX Blue Origin Redwire other companies move forward all with their own cameras all with their own systems
we’re going to get a lot more data but NASA still holds on to a lot of it So
for example with what I presented we need the raw data We need timestamps We
need data in a format where we can do true epidemic research So if we were
just to do those two things and again they do support from Harvard I think to
push that uh I think ASP will play a tremendously important role and particularly the aviation community and
the commercial space community the amount of data we get I think will completely shift below sophistication on
the stop and I think there’s also um probably the 20 or 30 hours of some of
that uh forward inter agency content uh in space disruptors day and the
ecosystemic futures podcast which we have Diane in the room here today so thank you Diane for helping get that
information on broadb to say though I’m a little less optimistic than Anna our relative adoption in government as I’ve
said during my testimony that particularly academic members of the NASA UAP independent study team were a
threat out threat not for saying UAP are real but for just having the tmerity of
even reviewing the top you can’t be science in that environment and part of
the reason that I’m calling PH to help is there’s still a great deal of skepticism even just at Nancy and
careers that get ended just outing again the Tamar research board so I think it’s
incumbent of all of us to push for real signs objective signs overcome that
stigma Let’s get to the data because our economy and our national security may be depending on and I think you contributed
so much So what I would say is some of the things that you experience you know or that Lou you know and Chris and
others experience there’s that body of having get able to point to those leaders So we had the advantage of being
able to point to your study you know into this prior work So um you know and again I I think there’s the opportunity
for the government but I would say that it’s it’s not there are industries that
move forward that are not um forwarded by the government But I I think just to
be something very important that came out and sometimes if we say oh UAP this UAP that um there’s going to be some
great technologies that come out of that That is very fluffy you know and who cares So I think um something that I got
freaked on in an unclassified just in a formal no classification level
environment and both in in personal capacity but then I later brought that
person in to brief others in the agency Is there a real and meaningful
technologies that have come from these programs And I think with a lot of this information you’re going to see that you
know the story about it has been in the internet for decades perhaps So what I
have though on uh from a very credible source was that yes there are people who
say that this came out of the UAE programs when we talk about lasers and
semiconductors and that was so important you know semiconductors the top 10
companies today a $6.5 trillion industry It we all benefit
from and underpins our global economy That is something that it’s not just oh
maybe we’ll get something It’s that there are tremendous people who have built things you know both in classified
and unclassified environments And uh that’s been you know put out by so many authors and people in the news but
somewhat are in environments that we can say this is taken seriously and those people have told the government that yes
there’s been real advantage on some of these most imported core technologies were coming for crash retrieval and I
think to get the government to take it seriously we need to engage the public we got to get outside the UAP bubble and
damp gar is a tremendous movie age disclosure it’s really blue story in many ways It’s extraordinary from
Selatin J Stratton If we can touch the public if we can get them engaged we can get them the same information that we
just saw I think that would be completely transformative Well let me
since time is up Yes First of all thank you sincerely for your participation It
was fantastic conversation Let me leave a couple thoughts here if I may before we say final farewell Uh one of the
recommendations we made to Congress is the u generation of a national intelligence strategy that would be
complicated on an annual basis just like we do for other of our targets Um it’s a
system that we perfected already and then right on the heels of that a national strategy every year annual
strategy among UAP drone basically any unattributed objects set in our skies uh
we should have a strategy for it We we’re seeing uh both on the combat field
and even in the streets of New York we’re we’re seeing technologies that we we can’t really explain and frankly
could be used against us in a very nefarious way if we don’t get a handle on it Um two what I’d like to do is
propose and and hopefully Congress at some point will be open to this that we should do a format every year for the
American public and for the media and allow Congress to get to uh the vibe of things and ask the questions that they
normally wouldn’t be able to catch and bring in the Department of Justice the intelligence community the power and
defense and do them all year Why not right Sitting down here in front of American people by well look at it
you’re paying their their their paychecks and boys right they kind of owe you some answers and they will come for some answers Um I would also say
please let your members of Congress know that you support this If you like what Representative Berles and
Representatives Luna and Mered and others have done here today let them know right They need to hear this and so
other members of Congress can see this and say “Hey that works right?” Tell
them that they need to hear that feedback unless you don’t want it at these again
Um but that would be my suggestion Last but not least I want to thank specifically our members of Congress Uh
because at the end of the day they’re your representatives They represent this country They are very much part of this
country And they are the reasons why you are all here today We are here They have
facilitated this They have sponsored this They’ve gone out of their way to put their political careers potentially
Jeffrey Freeman having this conversation for you So um if you appreciate
this let us know And last but not least thank you to every one of you Again our friends in the media the folks that came
over here some cases uh came from across the world and traveled here very long
distances to be with us here today Thank you very much um is very meaningful and we are on a
yearly spending of Bedford So with that said let’s give a round of applause to our guest here
and a huge round of applause for
Metro So with no further urge you uh this meeting
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Original Source Video YouTube Transcript
i appreciate actually read your book directly so appreciate you for being here as well and all of your hard work
as you know up until really the last congress I think it was
repres we do have an opportunity right now where we are seeing not just complete and a complete push for
transparency out of the current administration on this topic but also we have bal and
on this so thank you very much for your help and then also to the experts and people being here today to testify and
really to tell us and help us out with us again this is a community
effort this is not just you know Democrat Republican even just an American thing right there’s a massive push for this for good reason we know
recently in working with the National Archives they were able to actually update on the archives website all
things UAP there will continue to be documents scanned and updated and be on that task a chief citizen journalist can
actually go forward do the research yourself help us ask the tough questions and then I can also tell you that we
have posted dates for the next UAP hearing we are going to be doing two one is going to be government focused we are
asking various appointees I don’t want to release the names yet but we have been getting good response on them we
will make those known soon as well as military and former military will be
coming forward also to note that we were told um by one of Mr burles staffers
that’s helping us out this investigation about someone that wants to come forward in regards to a crash retreat program so
that’s pretty interesting to hear someone going on record about that obviously we’ve had a lot of people try to dispel the research that the
community has done and so we’re just really
Thank you i first want to just say thank you again to Tim for leading the charge
on this when it wasn’t when it wasn’t popular it was diffult and it took a lot
of courage and we I just wanted to I want to say thank you to Anna for her leadership and I’ll tell
you she is amazing to work with she is very humble in her attitude and her approach she doesn’t uh she likes
to let people other people join in the credit she is a very gracious
good i want to say thank you to everyone that has come
forward from to Mr to Mr brush and others have taken over
Mr graves here who have done taken a bold step and and the risk of their
reputation and their career there’s a lot of people that have sacrificed their career in order to get information out
to the American people we grateful for as well for the cooperation with Tulsa Gabard um whose
director’s initiative group is actively harmonizing classification guides to facilitate responsible releases she been
she’s been very effective with JFK assassination records and others and then the last thing I want to say is
that this is not a one-time thing this will not be it’s clear this is not a one
time data dump this is this is a systemic change to the process and the way that we are transparent with the
American people and with that we’re working on legislation that will that
will put that into practice and again thank you for everyone for being here i’m looking forward to today’s hearing
thank you all for being here i’ll be very brief lou thank you for the introduction thank my colleagues up here
for their kind words i’m not sure what that’s all about think I’m buying pizzas after this thing
they’re crazy i got a daughter that rides horses i don’t know how I’m going to get home
today but it is a pleasure being here and I want to thank the people that are that are sitting right there some dear
friends of mine people in the media and elsewhere that are always kind to me we
don’t agree on a dumb thing politically but we do agree that this is the biggest
cover up of our lifetime and we need to get to the bottom of it and I want you
fellow folks to know out there that we believe and for so many years people
that believe like we do have had to live in the shadows and when you bring it up
you get criticized and people uh say all kinds of awful things about you and God
damn I’m over that we know this thing’s covered up and we’re going to blow the
damn lid off of it so thank you all for being here let’s get
on what I’d like to do is uh because uh time is precious especially for the members obviously they have a real job
to do uh this is part of it but they have a whole lot of other responsibilities so with that said I’d like to first begin by thanking
specifically Representative Luna from the 13th district if I’m not mistaken of Florida uh for her leadership uh on this
particular in this particular forum and on this topic this would not have been possible if it was not for Representative Luna in her pursuit of
the truth uh she has a uh she has served her country uh quite
honorably and her husband as well if any of you been in the military may have run across him so on behalf of a very
grateful nation ma’am thank you for what you continue to do your continued service to this nation and that of your family it is greatly appreciated and
your service specifically as well with regard to the military so thank you um secondly I’d like to thank um
Representative Arlson um somewhat newer to this topic than some of the other
folks maybe on the Senate side and even the House side who has also championed truth and transparency within the
American government i would refer to him as a healthy skeptic um which I think is important always keeping an open mind to
speak for itself and in my interactions with Representative Grossman I’ve seen him to be every time and exclusively
honorable and truthful and he is now um I think it’s translated into the form
you see here the media president we’re going to have a very interesting conversation today and again this is
only possible because of the three individuals up here so uh if you have time later on I would I would suggest
you you give him a a good deal of thanks for what he is doing for our nation and last but certainly not least is
Representative Timber from Tennessee who has been spearheading this topic for
quite some time at great personal risk to his political career as most of you know um that’s one thing that
politicians tend to avoid is risk um especially when it comes to election
time and um Representative Bashett I would uh I would probably define him as
um bringing a working man’s perspective a common sense perspective to the bureaucracy we call Washington DC
certainly a breath of fresh air and um a champion for again truth and
transparency for for our government and for our institutions so with that said I’d like to offer a quick round of
applause for them
secondly I’d like to thank the esteemed panelists that are with us here today did you all hear me okay in the back
okay can you adjust your mic i can use my drill sergeant voice if I need to um we’re going to have uh three separate
sessions with panelists uh with extremely distinct backgrounds i am not sure there’s ever
been assembled a panel like this in front of the American people and I I
don’t say that lightly because I’ve been part of a lot of meetings a lot a lot of sensitive meetings both in the intelligence community and within the
national security apparatus um we have elements from academia elements from the
scientific community elements from the national security arena elements from the intelligence community um all
speaking here today to you about what they know regarding the UAP topic um the
assembly here is is dare I say possibly even historic and I’m truly honored to
be with you here today i will be your moderator real quick reminder for our panelists um I’d like to when you ask
your question try to keep it within try to keep it within 3 minutes
eric um if you go beyond that I might have to kind of get the conversation um
directed to some other questions because we do have a lot of panelists and uh I also have a tendency to to talk a lot so
I’m going to try to keep myself in check as well um but panelists if you could try to keep your responses to three
minutes some panelists have for you a presentation so for those who go to presentation we’ll do the presentation
first and then we’ll be followed up with questions and of course uh esteemed members of Congress if you have any questions at any time please feel free
to ask them and we will uh we will certainly have our panelists address those questions for you uh one more
reminder um again a security reminder i know I said it before but for anybody who’s come in here um after uh I’m going
to be asking questions some of those will be very pointed questions for those of you who have a security clearance or
who have held a security clearance I ask that you please be mindful that this is an unclassified venue and not to discuss
classified information um for the record none of us look good in an orange jumpsuit certainly I don’t so we want to
be mindful of that i’d also like to thank the media thank each and every one of you for being here i know this is a
topic that for quite some time was fraught with stigma and taboo would have been considered career suicide for any
respectable journalist to cover this topic just like it is for for politicians uh and our elected leaders
of this nation and um times are changing times are changing because of the evening and so I want to I want to do a
hearty thank you to the members of media who are covering this and last but not least and probably perhaps most
important I would like to thank each and every one of you in the audience each and every one of you that’s tuning in each and every one of you that’s
watching this each and every one of you that might be sitt sitting on your sofa at home or around the dinner table and
are interested in this topic and have asked questions um this is because of
you our elected officials put this on because of you not me and not even our
esteemed guests because of you and that should tell you something that means democracy is working folks that means
transparency is working that means we the people are winning and that’s a lot
that’s that’s profound this is democracy in action and you’re watching it so I
want to thank each and every one of you and I also want to thank real quick the staff here in on Hill that put this help
put this together and coordinate this i know it’s a bit of a zoo um but thank you so much for for being patient with
us and helping us with the audio visual and the media and the seating and it is very much appreciated so with that um
let’s go ahead and begin shall we so I would like to introduce uh the
first of our panelists here is Dr abu Lobe now bear with me because he has his
academic vite it’s probably about 10 pages long so I’m going to just try to truncate a little bit so Dr abu Lobe is
a PhD uh professor of science at Harvard University he is also the head of the
Galileo project he is also the founding director of Harvard’s black hole initiative he is a contributor to Arrow
uh he is also a trained astrophysicist let’s see if we can get
this right director of the Institute for theory
director the Institute for Theory and Computation um and a former member of
the President’s Council on Science and Technology so think about that for a minute right advising the president
um former chair of the board of physics and uh astronomy of the
nationalmies and uh also author of eight books and over 1,000 scientific papers and he is here
before you today by the way none of our panelists are being paid everybody’s doing this um out of their own kindness
and goodness of their own heart the second panelist uh we have here is Rear Admiral Tim Gudet um for those of you
who served in in the Navy know how hard it is to achieve the rank of admiral
right that is no easy feat uh he’s also a former acting administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration aka Noah former oceanographer for the Navy a advisory
board member of the UAPDF folks here that are helping make this happen um but I’ll tell you
something else about about Tim tim also happened to be one of
uh the Navy officers that was present and pretty during the Roosevelt
incidences uh the Roosevelt reason why I say plural because there are many of these UAP incidents that the USS
Roosevelt encountered in the 2013 2014 time frame uh when she was conducting
military operations in the uh support of the global war on terror and so Admiral
Gaudette I would I would consider indirectly a witness to some degree of
some of the dysfunction that the bureaucracy had overlaid on some of our
servicemen and women in uniform reporting UAP and certainly last but not least is
Dr eric Davis um not only a colleague but a friend and
in some cases even a mentor uh he is a theoretical and applied physicist senior
science adviser at Earth former researcher at the aerospace corporation and now those are just some
of those let me tell you who he really is dr eric Davis was one of our senior scientists during my tenure at ATIP the
advanced aerospace threat identification program and OAP as well
um he was one of our chief chief scientists and by the way he was also part of other legacy efforts before that
working with elements of the US government and I think what you’re going to find him have to say today is going
to be very very compelling um he’s an honorable man he has served his country
time and time again in some cases at great personal expense professionally and personally to himself
uh and probably one of the smartest individuals I’ve ever had the honor privilege to meet in my life and work with
um if you get a chance I’d shake his hand because I would consider him like the rest of these gentlemen a national
treasure um and I think like I said what what he’s going to tell you today is
going to be very interesting so this is why I do the reminder three minutes because even myself I would love to just
let him roll for about three hours um so with that said I think we have a presentation we’re going to present
first by Dr abby Lo so if we can just give him a quick round of
applause thank you so much it’s a great pleasure to be here let us be honest there are objects
in the sky that we don’t understand that’s not the first time
that we don’t understand something you know our knowledge scientific knowledge is an island in an ocean of
ignorance we don’t know what n what 85% of matter in the universe is we call it
dark matter but we invest billions of dollars figuring it out over the past
half century we haven’t yet figured it out my point is simple we should invest
a billion dollars in figuring out what is in our sky and that means developing artificial
intelligence algorithms software that would help us analyze data
from state-of-the-art sensors and in one case if all of these objects
are produced by humans the defense department will have
a new tool to monitor what’s out there in the sky it’s important for national
security however if one out of a million objects came from outside the solar
system the person who finds that object will get the Nobel Prize
it’s a winwin situation we need to invest a billion
dollars in this task and I will mention a few details of
what we can do with it this is a subject that the public cares
a lot about and so it’s one of the unusual opportunities to invest a
billion dollars in science and technology that will make all taxpayers
happy if you were to ask them do they care more about what dark matter is or
whether we have a neighbor that is intelligent from which we can learn
they will tell you it’s the second question that they want the billion dollars to be spent on so to make
taxpayers happy let’s invest the money and if we don’t find any technological
relics from other civilizations this would be a very precious defense system for our country
so I will show a few um slides describing what we have been doing over the past few years in the project that
I’m leading at Harvard University the Galo project what you see in the first
slide is a title of an article that appeared in New York Times
magazine and I was not happy with the content i contacted the editor and said
“If this is the way you describe science how can I believe anything you say about
politics that’s a good thing we can leave now you don’t care.”
[Music] Now Enrico Fermy in 1950 had lunch at LosAlamos and in his Italian accent he asked “Where is everybody?” And that’s a
question that every lonely person asks and what you tell a lonely person is
don’t be presumptuous your partner will not come to you you are not that attractive you have to go to dating
sites and and Rico Fermy didn’t even build a telescope to look out didn’t
have cameras to check and so saying where is everybody is
arrogant and many of my colleagues in academia argue extraordinary claims
require extraordinary evidence if you read the news you would
conclude that we are not extraordinary there is room for improvement and imagining something like
us on a planet that has similar conditions to Earth is not an extraordinary claim it’s just an
ordinary claim to say under similar circumstances you will get life and eventually intelligent life and most
stars in the Milky Way galaxy 100 billion of them formed billions of years before the sun so we are late for the
party they may have been before us so it’s an ordinary claim that requires
ordinary evidence when people make this statement they also imply that we should not invest any
funds in searching for them and without seeking evidence how can we find them it’s a self-fulfilling
prophecy so my point is that in within the scientific community innovation is
suppressed by people who assume the answer in advance i when I was a kid I was most frustrated
by the adults in the room because I would ask them a question and they would pretend to know the answer and the one
reason I became a scientist is because I don’t care what other people say i don’t care how many likes I get i just want to
figure out the answer based on evidence that’s the way detective works we shouldn’t assume anything but if we
don’t collect data we will never find anything
new now another important point is new scientific knowledge doesn’t fall into
our lab to find the Higs boson the CERN invested10 billion dollars in
the large halon collider to find the first generation of stars and galaxies in the universe the
scientific version of the story the biblical story of Genesis we had to invest $10 million in
the web i was one of the people in the first advisory the design back then the
next generation space telescope my point is in order to find
something new you need to invest resources time and effort it’s a lot of
work you cannot just sit on your chair and figure out the answer the way most people
do and just to give you an example you know we are familiar with
objects that have a positive mass we are also aware that the universe
is not just expanding but its expansion is accelerating so we see evidence for negative gravity gravity that is
repulsive pushing the universe apart and if we have access to a negative mass
just like there are positive and negative electric mass the total mass would be
zero this object would float under the gravity and you wouldn’t
need any fuel you would move it around so when they look at Starship our best
rocket whoever has an access to a negative mass would would laugh at it we are putting most of the mass in the fuel
of the rocket it’s a huge gigantic thing and if they had access to a negative
mass that would not be necessary you would just use the payload plus a negative mass that balances it just to
give an example of something beyond our knowledge if negative masses exist or not we don’t know if you can bottle this
dark energy that fills up the [Applause]
universe thank you now the Galileo project at Harvard
University that was established a few years ago and it followed the first
report from the office of the director of national intelligence to Congress and I suggested also to NASA
just around that time that they should look into that uh this is a subject
where the intelligence agency cannot really make a lot of progress on because
the data is limited so why not build observatories monitoring the sky the sky is not classified astronomers have been
looking at the sky for a while the oceans are not classified we just need sensors and then analyzing the data with
the state-of-the-art AI software that’s all we need so this was not happening and
you know I’m sort of I’m not happy with looking at past reports because when you
look at past reports you have very limited data and you can’t make a lot of
progress if the data is fuzzy you can’t really get it to be crispier but if you
have a working observatory that monitors the sky all the time all the oceans and
you see something unusual you can try and collect better data and
therefore I always say the best is yet to come if we were curious enough and
that’s what we should be we can collect data forget about the hundreds of reports from the past and have a
collection of millions of objects that we look at that’s what the Galileo project is about
and in the future we can get very good data with equipment that was never tried
before because astronomers usually focus on a small part of the sky and look at things that are far away they ignore
objects flying overhead and the Galileo project has developed an observatory at
Harvard University first that monitors the sky in the infrared optical radio and audio and as
of now we are actually doing triangulation we have multiple units that look at the same object from
different directions so that we can figure out the distance the velocity and the acceleration of the object that’s
extremely important and we are building additional observatories
uh one in Pennsylvania another one in Nevada hopefully by the end of the
summer we’ll have three observatories collecting data on a few million objects
every year and I say even even if one in a million is of extraterrestrial origin
that would be the biggest discovery that humanity ever made it would mean that we have a partner we shouldn’t assume
anything about the neighbor but it would be useful to
figure out what they are capable of because we can do better they’re
probably more advanced than we are if they reached our backyard before we reached their
backyard so we collected data on many uh
by now millions of of objects we analyzed it and obviously we are happy to share
the data with whoever is interested
but also over the past decade the first objects from outside the solar system
were discovered for the first time by astronomers there were three of
them the first was identified by US government satellites that are monitoring the Earth for any ballistic
missiles being launched by adversarial nations and in 2014 they noticed an object that
collided with Earth and exploded with a fireball that released 1% of the
Hiroshima atomic bomb energy and they decided it’s not
humanmade and therefore it can be shared with astronomy community so NASA
published a catalog of all these meteors over the past decade and uh one of them
was this one we looked at the catalog and uncovered it and realized that it came from outside the solar system
because it was moving very fast it was moving faster than 95% of the stars in
the vicinity of the sun outside the solar system and so the question is was
it a Voyager like probe because it’s moving so
fast or maybe just a rock from another star that was the first one and then the
second one in 2017 was a much bigger object the first one was half a meter in
size the second one was the size of a football field it didn’t collide with Earth it would have been catastrophic if
it did because it would have killed us all but it passed near Earth within a
sixth of the Earth sun separation it was observed by a telescope in Hawaii
monitoring near Earth objects because we are all afraid of what happened to the
dinosaurs right we don’t want to have the same fate and they realize this
object is moving too fast to be bound by gravity to the sun and they called it omua mua which means
a scout in the Hawaiian language now this object at first was
thought to be a comet but there was no cometary tail around it no gas or
dust and then it exhibited an excess push away from the
sun without any rocket effect of acting on it and
moreover it was it had a very extreme shape most likely flat like a disc based
on the reflection of sunlight the amount of sunlight reflected from it changed by a factor of 10 every 8 hours as it was
tumbling very unusual object so it wasn’t clear it’s not an
asteroid it’s not a comet what is it and I suggested well maybe it’s a space
trash an empty trash bag from another civilization so that was
2017 and then oops and then there was
Oops I’m not sure okay then there was a comet which looked just like the comets
that we are familiar with in 2019 also came from outside the solar system based on its speed and my colleagues said well
this one looks familiar so doesn’t it convince you that the others are also natural and I said well if you go down
the street and you see a weird person and after that you see a normal person it doesn’t make the weird person normal
so um MUA was really strange most likely
flat and um it’s not clear what it was i suggested maybe it’s a very thin object
pushed by sunlight reflecting sunlight and in fact a lot of
technological debris that we produced is being pushed by reflecting sunlight
in fact I’m not sure what okay in fact the
the space trash that we produce on January 2nd 2025 just this year an
amateur astronomer noticed an object passing near Earth and it was cataloged
as a near Earth asteroid 17 hours later it was realized oh this
object moves exactly the same way as the Tesla Roadster car that was launched by
SpaceX in 2018 Elon Musk it is the It is a car it’s not It’s
not an asteroid they removed it from the catalog and I actually have a bet with
Elon i am willing to put 1% of my net worth
against 1% of his network to search to check if there is
any other space entrepreneur who is more accomplished
than he is since the big bang 13.8 billion years
ago let’s figure it out it’s not a lot of money for him and then uh actually in 2020 there
was the same telescope in Hawaii that discovered the Wua discovered another object that was pushed by reflecting
sunlight and then after a few weeks the astronomers realized oh that’s a rocket booster from a 1966 launch by
NASA so we know that some of the objects that are unusual being pushed by
sunlight are humanmade the question is who produced Mua
Mua and my point is that the next Copernican revolution remember Copernicus realized
we are not the physical center of the universe i actually visited Poland
uh a year ago uh a day after visiting the Munich Security Conference where I spoke as the first
astrophysicist that ever by the way I saw on the roof of the hotel at the
Munich Security Conference there were snipers with the black head covers they were there to protect the politicians i
realized being an astrophysicist is really very fortunate but nobody wants to kill
me but then at any event it’s overrated
um the next Copernican revolution is that we are not at the technological
center of the universe we have something to learn from a smarter kid on our
cosmic block and I wrote a paper a couple of months
ago where uh I explained that with a space telescope we can actually go
through the million objects roughly meter in size within the orbit
of the earth around the sun that came from outside the solar system and figure out whether among them among all the
rocks there is space trash from other civilizations because over the past
billions of years they predated us and they pollute included installed space because we sent out five probes voyager
1 Voyager 2 Pioneer 10 Pioneer 11 and New Horizons they are heading out of the
solar system towards interstellar space we did it over 50 years just think how many more we would produce in the next
billion years uh and all of that keeps accumulating like plastics in the ocean
all of this trash produced by other civilizations and we just have to look in our backyard and figure it out again
a billion dollars will go a long way in this direction but right now this
subject is outside the mainstream of astronomy instead the the
highest priority defined by the Decal survey is to to to spend more than $10
billion in the search for microbes for the molecular fingerprints of microbes in the atmospheres of
exoplanets and frankly I am much more excited about finding
intelligence than finding microbes for a simple reason that we can learn from a
higher level of intelligence one reason I seek intelligence in interstellar space is because I don’t often find it
here on Earth and you may ask where is where
will Voyager be in a billion years it will be on the opposite side of
the Milky Way galaxy so if most stars formed billions of years before the sun
we know that for a fact they had I mean there were civilizations like us out there they had
plenty of time for their spacecraft to reach us and we haven’t really checked
until the last decade we didn’t really know about interstellar objects so I’m saying this is new now the meteor the
object that collided with Earth was interesting because for a cost of $1.5
million that I received uh from a donor we were able to go to the Pacific Ocean
and search for materials left over from this interstellar object it exploded
only 20 km above the surface of the ocean and uh that implied that it had
material strength tougher than all other hundreds of meteors in the NASA catalog
so it was unusual in its material strength in its speed and the question was could it be a Voyager like Meteor
could it be a Tesla Roadster car like Meteor because that car actually will
collide with Earth probably in several tens of millions of years and my colleagues if there are if there are any
astronomers at that time they might argue it’s a rock of attack that we’ve never seen
before so actually the US space command looked back at the
data after I reached them through the White House and they confirmed yes this
meteor actually came from outside the solar system the data was reliable and
they also released uh the light curve of the explosion that indicated how much energy was released
and at what altitude was the explosion and so I decided to lead an
expedition to the Pacific Ocean we went there uh slightly less than two years
ago and what you see here is the deck of the ship that was fittingly called
Silver Star uh we built a sled with magnets on both sides and we placed on
the ocean floor which was a mile deep and we surveyed a region that is 7 miles
in size looking for any molten droplets left over from the explosion just to
figure out was it a natural rock or maybe a
gadget and I told my students before I left if we find a gadget and it has
buttons on it should I press a button the opinions were split half of
the class said please don’t do that he put all of all of us at risk and the
other half said “Please do we would like to see if it’s judg.”
Um so we brought back materials um and it was a two-eek
expedition i put the this all the materials in this black suitcase and shipped shipped it by FedEx to to my
home and then brought it to the laboratory of my colleague at Harvard Stein Jacobson
uh who has is a worldrenowned geocchemist that has the best instruments in the world and on on the
other side of me in this photo is the summer intern Sophie Berstroom who worked with me that summer and she
discovered 850 molten droplets within the materials that we brought back and I uh gave her
the honorary title the sperl hunter and you can see here what these
molten droplets looked like they were very distinct relative to the background sand and we picked them up with
tweezers and published the results and so there was one type of those molten
droplets about 10% of the entire reservoir that looked very unusual they
had a composition a chemical composition that was very different than solar system materials up to a thousand times
higher abundance of burillium lanthanum uranium than you find in solar system
materials and so that’s a possible indication that we found some material
from the original object but we want to go back and search for bigger pieces with a
robot that we will put on the ocean floor it will cost $6.5 million we don’t have a fund the rest of yet if anyone is
interested in joining us let me know this is an image from the last day of the previous expedition where I was
standing on the ship looking at the sunset and next to me is an 88 years old
Art Wolf Art Wright who was um a
commander of a destroyer during the Vietnam War and I really liked him
because he wouldn’t speak much he would solve problems and everything he said was true
and there aren’t many people like that these days what you find most often are people that are virtual
signaling that are trying to impress you that’s partly the culture of social
media but this mission was a success thanks to
art and he reminded me of my father i really liked him now this year this in August 2025
there is a new observatory in Chile that was funded by the Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation it’s
called the Vera Rubin Observatory and it will survey the
southern sky every four nights and could find more like objects every few months
if they are out there and now we know to look at them in much greater detail we
can use the web telescope to do that and this telescope will use a camera that
is 3.2 2 gap pixels in resolution so a thousand times more than the number of
resolution elements you have in your cell phone so I’m very excited about the coming year or two uh we will have new
results from the observatories that the Galo project is building we will have potentially a new expedition where we
can look for bigger pieces of this first interstellar meteor and the Ruben Observatory might find more like objects
but if we really want to make fast progress we need more funds if I had a $100 million or a
billion dollars I know exactly what needs to be done and we can make we can get much better understanding of our
cosmic neighborhood as I said before u this the
software that we developed would be of great use to the Department of Defense thank you
[Applause] very followed very quickly by uh AdmiralGent he’d like to say a couple words and we’re going to try to make this uh brief so we can go ahead and uh start getting
to some of the questions sir thank you very much just great to be
here and representatives Luna and Berles and Brett appreciate you giving us all
an opportunity to to share what we want to share and say what we want to say about this important topic of UAP so
I’ll be about five minutes here maybe a little less but today I call on the American scientific enterprise to
mainstream UAP research and development and to do that properly I should first begin by assessing the current state of
UAP research there are a few brave individuals and organizations conducting such research including professor AI
lobe through the Gallo project at Harvard professor Diana Pasila at UNCW
Drs gary Nolan and Peter Scayfish the Soul Foundation with Stanford University
doc Professor Jeffrey Krypal with the Archives of the Impossible at Rice University and the Scientific Coalition
of UAP Studies but these are by far the exception for UAP research and
scientific study is shunned by the American science community red large even with dozens of credible former
military witnesses coming forward as well as legislative action from Congress in recent years the stigma remains too
great to jeopardize the reputation promotion potential and tenure of those in academia
to better understand this resistance it might be useful for me to describe the state of climate science in this country
where the complete opposite is occurring as a former administrator of the National Oceanic Atmospheric
Administration with a PhD in oceanography I have studied the changes occurring in our Earth system and while
they are indeed significant and I am by no means a climate denier climate change is is far from the existential threat
that the mainstream media and some in the science community claim it to be a false narrative has been propagated that
global warming caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gases is the cause of every severe weather event on any given day
this is mainly the result of the large number of scientific studies that employ extreme and implausible emission scenarios lacking the expertise to
critically evaluate such studies the average citizen is readily accepted such misinformation conflating every extreme
weather event with climate change is imprecise incomplete and incorrect the most glaring examples come around every
hurricane season for which satellite data over the 50 years shows there’s been no trend upward or downward of
these storms the same goes for wildfires where news coverage always links climate change to their occurrence but wildfires
have actually been increasing in this country so even the intergovernmental panel on climate change has been unable
to conclusively detect changes in extreme weather and climate event frequency and intensity however saying
that we are not in fact in a climate crisis is heresy the mainstream media and the global science
community this is the situation with UAP but in reverse ample evidence even
congressional testimony attest to the scientific validity of UAP but the response by members of the scientific
community has been either a to bury their heads in the sand or b to make baseless mockery of the courageous
contrarians like Professor Low who seek the truth why is this so well the reason
is partially uh due to overclassification and a deliberate
decadesl long disinformation campaign by the US Department of Defense and intelligence community unlike climate
change UAP and the non-human intelligence which control them very well could be an existential threat as
our moderator Lu Alzando eloquently described in his book aptly named imminent the scientific community needs
to wake up to the reality of UAP which represents the most monumental development since the Capernac
revolution consider the extraordinary report I received this weekend when a
former US Navy S860 Seahawk helicopter crew chief who was embarked on the
carrier USS Dwight D eisenhower in 2021 described to me his reporting on
forwardlooking infrared video of a metallic sphere at an altitude a few
hundred feet above the ship traveling along a linear trajectory horizontal the sea surface before it accelerated into
the horizon at an incredible speed disappearing completely upon landing uh
he discussed this with some of the pilots and the other air crew before transferring the flur footage to the
carrier’s intelligence officer moreover this was not an isolated event for the Eisenhower strike group during that
deployment saw many many instances of UAP primarily F-18s frequently
encountering them at high altitude and uh and this topic was
widely discussed by the airwing during the entire deployment and later fellow air crew members of this this crew chief
uh from another squadron deployed on board the USS Gerald R ford and shared similar experiences
the crew chief also informed me that the secret laptops in their ready room provided access to a share drive where
numerous UAP sightings on Fleer were archived they stored these videos on a
folder named range fowlers you’d like that Ryan and uh and his commanding
officer and safety officer were aware of these incidents but there was an unspoken understanding not to discuss
them openly in the ready room i have spoken to other sailors still in active duty and their sightings as UAP have
become so numerous that they are desensitized to the phenomenon my point being that the Navy possesses a trove of
video evidence and data regarding UAP and I see no reason why flur footage of
UAP and Navy training ranges could not be declassified and shared with the scientific community with open access to
more data like this we could transform every institution of higher education by establishing a Galileo project within
their astronomy and astrophysics departments a sole foundation with their within their bio medicine and humanities
programs and an archive of the impossible in their religious studies and philosophy curricula to close I
point out that last month at the endless frontiers conference in Austin the president’s science adviser Michael Gracios committed the Trump
administration to creating a golden age in American innovation i’m convinced
that UAP research can not only support this but accelerate it in ways beyond
our imagination the time to destroy the stigma associated with UAP is now i ask
the House Oversight Committee and other members of Congress to demand the DoD DOE DHS and NASA release more UAP data
for open science and I call on the White House to include UAP research in this 2025 R&D priorities memo thank you all
thank you very much so going to get to our first
question here and uh it is not scripted and it is to uh my former colleague Dr
eric Davis um and be very careful how I ask this
specific question welcome Mr gold good to see you as always sorry
um Dr davis I I know your background and I know your work uh in our former
program the advanced aerospace threat identification program i also know to some degree some of the history and
firsthand experience you have on UAP i believe that this committee uh and the
esteemed members of Congress and the American public would love to hear to
the degree you’re able to discuss it the direct access you had um for those who don’t know Dr davis was and I’ll let him
answer this was it was submitted into into into the matter of record for Congress a couple years ago the Wilson
Davis memo it was alleged that he was the author of it and if you don’t know
what that is I encourage you to look it up it has been entered as a matter of public record in the congressional
record and it is extremely significant um this is the man i won’t
say he did or he didn’t i’ll let him tell you um who offered that potentially and
furthermore I know has had involvement in the UAP program specifically from a
crash retrieval perspective now I’m going to be mindful here uh Dr davis please be careful of security classification but do you mind sharing
to the degree you’re comfortable with your involvement with information related to crash retrievalss and
um and your experience sure
thank you i’ve been uh I’m an astrophysicist and also a what we what
Mark Jones at NASA and I called the breakthrough propulsion physicist worked on breakthrough propulsion together from
1996 to 2002 and then we continued after that to develop a book that we published in the AIAA press in 2009 uh frontiers
of propulsion science so my background is in uh advanced deep space and interstellar space flight mostly faster
than light propulsion through the use of general relativity theory and quantum field theory as well as advanced nuclear
propulsion like nuclear fision and nuclear fusion and um beamed energy propulsion which I worked on as a
principal investigator for the air force research lab at Edwards Air Force Base so I’ve got quite a broad background and
I began my work in UFOs uh or UAP starting in 1996 when Robert Bigalow
hired me to work for him as his director of aerospace physics and astrophysics at the National Institute for Discovery
Science and that was a um that was a pretty transformative job for you
because as a physical scientist I’m seeing for the first time odd phenomena i’m investigating it using forensic uh
science techniques in the field interviewing witnesses collecting data and I have a team of uh colleagues on
the staff that I work with also PhDs and we had a world-class science advisory board which uh my former boss in Austin
Hal was on the was was on the board of was on that science advisory board and was the last chairman of that board
actually we also had Apollo 14 astronaut Ed Mitchell and for a short time Apollo
uh 17 astronaut Jack Schmidt and uh we had many uh many academicians and former
CIA national intelligence officers uh social psychologists psychologists
medical doctors um and nuclear engineers and the list goes on we had shock
bullying primarily as well so uh it was a really transformative because I grew
up in the 60s and 70s and I became familiar with Carl Sean carl Sean and uh
strongly important page co-authored a book called uh UFOs a scientific debate which was published by the tripleas
press um the tripleas is the American uh association for the advancement of science and science is their prestigious
journal that they publish and um so that was a prestigious publication every
chapter was authored by experts in the field in academia who have studied UFOs and some angle of it from a scientific
data uh standpoint data that was collected data that was analyzed and so
they presented it in homes uh for a bizarre reason in the 1980s Carl Sean
had this wonderful astronomy show called Cosmos and the companion book for that
and what’s ironic is that he changed 180 degrees he all of a
sudden went from being UFOs we have in this book that I co-authored or
co-edited with Martha Page uh all this wonderful data that’s been collected that is not explainable due to
conventional astronomical ical weather or man-made explanations or events or
objects uh I’m I’m now calling it um pseudocience it’s fringe science people
are mistaken pilots uh have poor vision uh military pilots especially and I’ve
heard that from Leonard David who’s a sc a aerospace engineering aviation space
exploration writer and uh people like him have said that our military pilots
especially the ones at the USS Nimmits during its encounter of the tic tac UAP back in November of 2004 oh yes those
pilots have poor vision they’re flying what $20 million fighter
aircraft they war vision how did they get through the naval aviation program and top gun school with war vision uh Dr
davis could you could you elaborate a little bit on your again to the degree that you’re comfortable oh I so so it
was a transformative uh issue for me or or a job it transformed my worldview it
opened up my worldview uh to a lot more possibilities than what I was used to thinking as a trained PhD physicist i
earned my doctorate in astrophysics at the University of Arizona in 99 and so um I worked on three space missions in
graduate school the uh IOS which is the infrared astronomical satellite program and the two voyage missions to the other
planets so as pertaining to the topic that Lou wants me to talk
about I’m not trying to avoid it it is a sensitive subject
um so uh it’s due to astronaut Ed Mitchell um Dr dread Mitchell captain
USN retired because of him and I won’t go into a long story but it’s because of him that I got on the trail of looking
for the so-called uh legend within the UFO community uh of the retrieval of
crashed or landed UAP craft or UFO craft as they were known back in those days and by the way UAP the term unidentified
aerial phenomenon goes back to the 1940s even so um so I followed this trail and
I ended up over the course of the following two and a half decades working for Bigalow working for
the Air Force Research Lab working for Halov attech international incorporated
uh and then uh and then working at the Aerospace Corporation so we’re we’re
working in a combination of industry and classified programs that we were contracted to do on behalf of the uh for
the Defense Intelligence Agency and for the Pentagon agencies that Blue worked at and the UAP task force that J
Stratton led uh at the Office of Naval Intelligence and so uh a long story
short is that I came into contact with industry leaders technical scientists
uh both active duty and later retired as well as intelligence officers generals admirals colonels uh people who directed
intelligence or human intelligence collection and analysis directorates at the DIA and the Central Intelligence
Agency who uh reached out to me to have me do some foreign UAP uh intelligence
analysis and assessment and so uh I have been exposed to so much in the classified realm that
I can tell you definitively that there is a there there uh the human race
basically the world biggest governments uh like the United States our adversary
China and Russia at least as far as I know have had the uh occasion to recover
craft that have either landed or crashed or both uh in their territory or even outside of their territories and have
taken those back to their more the most sensitive of their programs that they’ve ever had these programs are uh even more
sensitive and more well- hidden than uh the Manhattan project was or or the modern nuclear weapons industry and and
the US military and the department of energy programs to uh maintain and and
upgrade and modernize our nuclear weapons arsenal and so um this is one of
the this is one of the most well-hidden programs it is hidden from congressional oversight and always has been and it was
hidden by the action of President Eisenhower who instituted presidential emergency action directives during his
administration these directives are not shared with Congress they were classified and when the Freedom of
Information Act was instituted in the 70s and is not subject those are not subjected to the Freedom of Information
Act uh request um this these directives provide cover for actions that are
associated with the with the retrieval of these vehicles and the uh and the
scientific and engineering study of them and that takes place within the industry
um what happens is the department of defense offices CIA offices they create
shell companies they give a sole source contract to the shell company who passes the money to a selected group of uh
defense industry firms and those firms will take that contract money and turn them around and uh use that as internal
things called internal research and development funds which they give to their own people inside their company their own employees to do the reverse
engineering um analysis and study of of these recovered vehicles and so this
avoids all congressional oversight it avoids the game bait and um it’s one of
the most clever techniques used to hide it and as far as I know only one fourstar general uh and one three star
admiral were able to locate these programs and um and that’s about as much as I can say they located the programs
uh and they uncovered them one got a lot of resistance and hostile reception and
was uh told that uh he found who he was looking for they were who they were
suspected of being yes they were a UFO UAP rash recruitable and reverse engineering program the other one uh had
a lot more political power behind him because of his statue as a four-star general and uh he was able to get into
the program and uh use his authority and his access i think they call that
a super user the super user have access to all way specialized access programs
so he had his capability available into that whole thing uh I was fortunate to meet Dave Drush at the behest of um Jay
Stratton dave was a NRO liaison officer to the UAP task force and Dave was
working for his boss at the NRO which is situated in the second force gifts uh of
the aerospace corporation building Colorado Springs and I was assigned to work at the aerospace corporation
facility in Huntsville Alabama because I was supporting NASA’s space nuclear propulsion program office so uh Jay put
Dave and and Dave’s uh boss and I together and I briefed them for two and a half days just the week before COVID
struck and uh Dave took all of my classified and proprietary information
of all the investigations I did at NIDS AFRO and working for uh helping up
attem of that was his classified missile war to the IG of the IC and um so there
is an error there there we have had this program going on in various guides various code names code names change
roughly every 3 years um they often shift around due to major office and
programmatic reorganizations for presidential administration presidential administration maybe every 5 to 10 years
in some cases and so these things are are very old they uh they come in they’ve gone but they’re still around
and uh the amount of money that’s been involved I would say since the beginning in 1944 with the first recovery in Italy
of a of the US Army’s recovery of a craft that crashed in Italy back in 1933
the United States Army invaded Italy and pushed the third Reich out they were able to recover that craft and bring it
back to right airfield and all of the crash retrievals that have taken place generally on land have gone to right
airfield the majority of the crash retrievals or recoveries of whatever uh situation it was uh take place in the
maritime environment and I’m not sure where that is going i think they’re probably also going to write were in
those days right airfield i don’t know where they’re going today though because I’ve only worked on the legacy uh
history of this part of it up until about uh the early 2010s and ever since
the end of the OSAP and the ATIP I don’t know where that those operations are
going on these days so I think that’s about it is that it
there is a question I would always ask and I’ll just say this really easily uh Leslie King and Rob Blumenthal asked me
this for an interview I gave them um in July of 2020 for the New York Times article that they published they
interviewed Lou and uh Senate uh former Senate majority leader Harry Reid i
think Harry was already retired then wasn’t he yeah okay so I said basically
my interface with the leadership at the industry uh which were a number of
individuals is the following the craft that have been recovered are not of the earth they’re not made by human hands
they are not from this planet they are not human they are an aliote technology
whatever the word alien means are they extraterrestrial we don’t know we don’t know uh what motives do they have well
we need anthropologists and social psychologists and philosophers to figure that out because they haven’t communicated that to
us so physicists like me and Abby we cannot answer questions like motive we
just need to take data we call it measurements and signals intelligence in the intelligence industry and Abby I
support 10,000% because we need him to do what he needs to do uapx is another group from the University of Albany in
New Albany New York they’re doing that as well and there are other groups out there building up their own sensor
speeds to try to scan the sky fulltime 247 to look for something that’s eye and
definitely not weather definitely not an aircraft definitely not a kids blue quadcopter
well thank you Dr davis my recommendation would be at some point here to get you in a classified setting
like some of the rest of us had already done that before and have a frank conversation with some of the
representatives who I think would be um very interested to hear the other part of that conversation which I am aware of
and been part of um with that said uh before we go on I
wanted to thank real quick uh Rep nick Pic for uh is that how do you pronounce your name sir I apologize baggage
baggage okay forgive me baggage uh Rep nick Begage uh who arrived uh here just
not too long ago so thank you sir very much uh from from Alabama from Alabama
oh Alaska you like
the
rece has been matched in high resolution in fact some have stipulated that we
have known even more about the surface of our own moon than the depths of our own
oceans concrete mapping campaigns autonomous gliders deep sea sonars or
cabled observatories would give researchers the best chance of
detecting undersea UAP activity up to this point we’ve been discussing about
the stuff we see in our skies and possibly space but the one thing we’ve neglected are those observations of UAP
that are underwater and this kind of goes to the whole trans medium characteristic that
we’re seeing that some of these UAP can display particularly as a former Navy man and uh member of Noah what what what
advice could you offer there thanks L that’s a great question and uh in fact I
would advise us to continue what we started in Trump’s first administration and what we did is we got him to sign
presidential memorandum on mapping the US inclusive economic zone and that
directed the establishment of a strategy a plan national strategy a plan and a
council an area council to contribute to the effort and so in the few we did this
in 2020 and in the five years since we’ve been able to go from having 40% of
our EEZ map to 50% and and it involves not only using ships sonar but also
exploring the water column with deep diving remotely operated vehicles swarms of drones underwater drones i used to
own 120 in the Navy and that that fleet’s growing and uh and Noah has a pretty sizable fleet of of underwater
and surface drones and they partner with the private sector that has a vast capability as well so I’d say I’d say we
really want to ex expand the work that’s already occurring within the government and the private sector and and target it
because most of it is targeted towards ocean science and that’s great but if we open the aperture a bit and include UAP
as a research target I think we’ll learn a lot more about the phenomena as well as the ocean
thank you very much uh the next question we have is uh is geared
towards Dr ailope here and my question for you sir is what is your
recommendation for the new generation of scientists who want to enter into this
field of study but don’t know exactly where to begin yes I actually gave up on the senior
members of our community and I have great hope that the young generation
will approach it without any bias because science is all about evidence and
curiosity and we lose that when we become the adults in the room so for the
young uh people in fact I was asked to establish a gala observatory in a new
stem cell uh campus that will be built in Indiana and I’m very excited about
that because those high high school students and uh fledgling scientists
would be unbiased they would look at the data and try to figure it out that’s the
way science should be done and very often if you assume something if you say there is nothing out there and you are
not looking then obviously that’s a self-fulfilling prophecy so I very much hope that the young generation will
approach these subjects without any stigma without any prejudice without any bias because it’s of great interest to
national security and even if it has nothing to do with what lies outside the solar
system we need to figure it out maybe other nations have technologies
that we are not aware of and if we do find something from
outside the solar system it’s the biggest discovery ever made in science
it will change our perception and our place in the universe i had a group of um
religious people that came and and they belong to Christianity today
and organization and they asked me what would be the implications to religion and I said well I have two daughters and
when the second one was born I didn’t lose any of my love to the first one so
imagining that God can only attend to one civilization is very limited and I think in fact you know it
It would be enriching to realize that we have siblings we might be jealous if they’re more advanced than we are maybe
they get more attention but you know that’s
exciting we may get inspiration from finding something better than us so why
is it that academia the mainstream is shying away from this partly because the
public cares so much about it and you know there are lots of
statements that are not correct being made by people who have no evidence but
that should not be a reason to avoid this subject we should study it and young
people I think have the ability to figure it out if we have the resources
allocated to the research we’ll figure it out we have the equipment it’s much more exciting than figuring out what
dark matter is whether there are microbes on exoplanets which probably
exist in any warm water environment similar to Earth
i’m willing to bet that there are microbes but I don’t care much about them i really want to find things that
are better than us so that we can get better we can improve oursel and the young generation hopefully will do it
for us if we only allocate the resources we don’t block them because the
gatekeepers you know used this technique of not funding such
research ridiculing it and even when I went on the expedition people said oh he
will not find anything oh he went to the wrong place we don’t believe the US
government data from the US space command and my suggestion is just to
ignore the naysayers because they boring
okay I have you all right thank you Dr little i’m going
to make this very quick i know one of the representatives is very short on time but there’s a question I would like to ask in her presence uh the question
goes to Dr davis or Davis um we’ve had discussions at length in certain
settings um in formal official setting and I’ve been part of where we talk about exotic material i think it might
be very helpful to the degree you can can you please explain um what is what
makes exotic material that has been recovered from the US government exotic
what makes it different from atomically and chemically
it’s actually a very simple answer it’s the way it’s fabricated it’s the way it’s fabricated that’s what makes it
exotic it’s not a new element that’s never been discovered uh and placed on the periodic table of elements no no no
uh the materials are in the periodic tables they’re either radioactive isotopes that we already know of or
they’re any of the other non radioactive non-actide elements on the table it’s just the combination of the materials is
unusual uh it could be that you could say that that’s exotic but it’s the
composition it’s how you built the craft the materials that form the craft and
everything inside the craft it’s it’s quite exotic because uh one of the company’s uh leadership was a young
material scientist when he graduated with his doctorate in material science from one of the university uh one of the
uh universities in Illinois back in 1970 and he was hired by Ben Rich to go work
with him and a team at scope works that was the advanced projects a development
agency I think is what blocking aircraft called it back in those days so um so
basically this is what he was telling me he’s a advanced internal scientist and he said well we could use the best
diagnostic equipment we had back in those days uh which was 60 uh 70s 80s
and 90s and um we could see the elements through mass mass spectroscopy that
compose these structures but when we look at how they’re composed and structured uh it’s it’s like nothing
we’ve been able to fabricate on Earth we’ve never been able to reproduce it on Earth and we have no extrapolated
engineering or physics technology to tell us or inform us on how we can possibly learn how to fabricate this on
Earth so they they understood that it’s the combination of the elements was very unusual uh it was counterintuitive but
it’s the way the materials are fabricated that’s what makes it awesome
excellent thank you very much sir um next question is going to go if I can go yes ma’am absolutely yes so thank you
for you guys coming today i have to get going but I am charging Burles and Burchchett um to be here and continue on
while I am not here um but I will say that I mean the stuff that you guys have all told us today mind-blowing and I
think you know going on record is even more important so we are going to invite you back to also time at some point but
I do have to head up to thank you so much for your time and we’ll be back thank you
[Applause] okay so the next question is going to go to uh I’ve got a long list of questionswe’re obviously not going to get to them all and we have to try to stay on track so it’s probably going to be my last question for this and we could go on all
day but we’ve got two other panels we have to get through and there’s going to be some new information for you uh last
question before the break Admiral Gaet um I know that you were privy to the incidents in the U regarding the USS
Roosevelt in fact there’s another distinguished guest we have with us here today Ryan Graves who is a pilot uh who
uh has been very helpful informing Congress about some of the air safety issues because he himself has come up
close and personal with one of these objects whatever they are um could you please provide a brief synopsis on your
experience and more importantly what was the reaction by certain elements within the
Department of Defense and some of your frustration that you experienced regarding that reporting that type of
reporting thanks Louis yes I’d be glad to so at the time of the Roosevelt UAP sightings I was the onestar admiral in
charge of all the Navy meteorologists and oceanographers and I had I had aerographers mates on the ship doing the
weather forecast and and as the chief meteorologist of the Navy my responsibility was safety of flight one
of my main responsibilities and at the time I received an email Navy’s classified system secret system uh and
it was addressed to every subordinate under a command called Fleet Forces Command the Fourstar Command that I
reported to and that the commander of the Theater Roosevelt Strike Group reported to as well as several other
units and attached uh to the email was the Go Fast video that everybody’s seen now and has been declassified and
released to the public uh and the email title was urgent safety applied issue and all capital letters and it came from
the operations officer of Fleet Forces Command asking if any of the recipients of the email knew what these were these
UAP because they were having numerous near midair collisions as as Ryan Graves uh saw firsthand his his squadron mates
and um and then the next day uh that email was wiped from my computer and no one talked about it in any subsequent
meetings of Fleet Forces Command and this was very unusual because the primary job of fleet forces command is
to prepare Navy units to deploy like the theore Roosevelt strike group and that exercise was a critical pre-eployment uh
requirement to get pilot certified to land on the flight deck and so not talking about an emergency safety of
flight issue for example the UAP that split a section of aircraft you don’t want anything to get within a mile of an
F-18 when when it’s operating so that that they didn’t talk about it that was covered up uh didn’t sit well with me
and it’s and that’s the reason I have come out today and or really for the past few years uh to talk about this and
make sure we we support all these reasons to uh to acknowledge uh and and
make be more transparent about UAP activity and data and that’s why I’m on the advisory board of Brian’s American
for Safe Aerospace and we’ve been advocating for the FAA to institute a system of reporting with standards to
get more information out there uh to support safety flight and science
excellent i’m okay uh we have a question by uh Representative Burlson go ahead sir floor is yours yeah thank you um Mr
davis I wanted to ask before you before this panel is over want to pull some threads here the
um what is your understanding of the physics um or the likely propulsion technology
what is your assessment of of what the capabilities are and how it’s being
achieved and then also in what I want to ask about materials and energy as well
uh we can only speculate um these things are so far and advanced uh we can only
speculate the best speculation I can come up with is general relativity does a great job predicting something like a
warp bubble uh UAP do exhibit the phenomenon of sublight or less than
light speed for bubbles um however that’s becomes a challenge when we talk
about UAVs that dive into the ocean and climb up out of the from under the ocean and up into the air so uh warp so it’s
not warping spaceime it’s a warp in spaceime yeah it is that’s described on Einstein general theory
and so the problem is you doesn’t gravity warp spaceime that’s right right
so so these objects are changing space time around them yeah
they you’d have a thin shell of energy and the type of energy has to be would have to be negative energy density and
it would be consistent with the type of energy density that you can create in vacuum and examples of that are the
casemir cavity that has a little vacuum uh uh region that’s bound by the two
plates of the cavity uh there’s also squeeze light squeeze states of light where that’s a laser beam where you’re
going to take uh uh some part of canonical uh noise fluctuations from out
of that part of the beam you’re not interested in and pile it up uh elsewhere in the phase space and this is
getting really technical so so I’ll just kind of keep it this way you’re going to take the quantum vacuum
fluctuations that we know is quantum noise shot noise and laser beats you’re going to pile it up somewhere else uh in
an area you’re not interested in measuring and you only want to measure the amplitude of that beam and at that point when you take the quantum factor
fluctuations out of that amplitude that energy density goes negative and the energy density is the square the
amplitude so that goes negative and um that’s an example of negative energy the
um the mass of the earth creates space time curvature if it was I’m sorry oh I was going to say so that space-time
curvature which we feel it’s the force of gravity on the surface of the earth drags down quantum vacuum fluctuations
of the quantum fields that are out in space near near the earth in the vicinity of the earth and uh that energy
density happens to be negative and so this is an example of theoretically predicted astronomical sources of
negative energy as well as laboratory sources of negative energy so that’s what you would need to build a work and
that’s what you would need to build a uh construct a shell just a brief comment of clarification we have two pillars of
modern physics quantum mechanics and Einstein’s theory of gravity which is
curvature of space time right we don’t have a reliable theory that combines
quantum gravity so what we are hearing is speculation
we do not have the knowledge to figure out if you can create curvature of space
time out of negative energy density because we have never mastered this tech we don’t have an understanding of that
so it’s possible that you know a millennium from now we’ll have those quantum gravity engineers you know
that’s possible currently we just you know we’re just like too primitive
technologically to figure it out the question is is there something in possession of government that the
scientists should look into and you know I would love to to help government figure it out because it may guide us
about a theory of quantum gravity if if we have something yeah so we have good ideas about these things and we can
speculate on uh on what the best approach to take to build the work bubble or the shell
neg which will be shortcut through space time between two distant points but um
we have we have craft in our possession um there are no physicists literally
working in those programs so basically mechanical aerodynamics aerospace thermal control engineers electronic
electrical engineers and material scientists and material science is a part of engineering often uh usually
kind of overlaps chemistry as well and they’ve never had a physicist like him or I uh they’ve never had an applied
physicist or an experimental physicist and so they are really lacking in the ability to understand how these things
work sir the legacy program has been very insulated and insular so unfortunately um it’s it’s a bit of a
forget my approach here but a bit of an incestuous community um there’s not a whole lot of outside involvement because
it is so highly classified and that’s been some of the frustration and I think challenges technologically speaking
because we haven’t been able to recently apply new talent new ideas new theories to what may be u what the US government
may be in possession of what about the energy potential um the
energy is a question we’re seeing right yeah we I haven’t been able to access that dr
davis can you talk for a moment i’m sorry about the Nimtts incident the calculations for the object to go from
80,000 ft within less than a second 50 ft over the water what What type of energy uh requirement we’re talking
about hundreds of times the total electrical energy produced in the United States annually that’s the kind of
energy that is representative of the observed features and performances of
UAP craft especially the Tic Tacs encountered in November of 2004 and uh
so it’s hundreds and hundreds of times what the what the United States produces annually like in electrical power and so
uh that that compares really well with uh interstellar spacecraft that would travel relativistic or ultra ultra
relativistic ultra relativistic being anywhere from 90 to 99% of the speed of
light the energy just is astronomically huge so um these craft uh I have not
been I don’t have the security clearances I need to know to get access to the technical details but I am made
to understand that the craft are consistent in size with the tic tac uh even double in size of the tic tac uh
that would be up to about 100 ft long by uh 50t diameter of that type boomerang
shaped craft um arrowshaped craft triangular shaped craft and so forth uh the biggest one that had been observed
especially that we investigated at mids in 1999 involving the sky air force base that one was a 600 foot long craft and
it was about roughly 100 ft tall and um so they don’t have possession of craft
like that i’ve never been told that it’s usually the more man scale they couldn’t
move so we might know it yeah so uh so we we
can only speculate um I know Jim Casy wrote in his book um uh I don’t remember
the title of it but anyway it was coated with Colin Keller who I worked with at NID and George Nap of KV in Las Vegas
and so Jim mentioned and I Jim was the program manager for the AAS the OSAP the
AAS uh uh WAP I think it was and um uh
and so basically he described in his book somebody I I don’t know if it was him because he never I think he said it
was him uh went inside one of these craft that he had access to and they couldn’t recognize any propulsion or
power devices or systems inside the craft it was completely unusual travis
Taylor and I have speculated that possibly they’re teleporting energy from a remote distant location where the
energy is produced that’s teleported to the craft and that’s how the craft can move around without having to carry
propellant uh or a rocket engine or or an advanced work drive engine on it
that’s one possibility that we speculated on the material so what you have me thinking is
carbon can take multiple forms right and are you saying that that is the same
with other material other elements the way in which what we found
is different forms of these elements that we have it would be different it’ be different combinations of the
elements is ratios as well correct yeah so you’re you’re you’re going to have a
variety of uh whatever structural part of this that came off of UAP and I don’t know because I wasn’t I didn’t have uh
way better than acknowledge SAP access i only had TSSCI so at the SCI level I was
informed that there would be combinations of elements from the periodic table combinations of their isotopes so you have a variety of
elements uh as they naturally occur or some isotopes of them mixed together in a certain way and then they’re uh
structurally built in a very unusual way that even today we have no um equivalent or handoff to so these were these this
is about as much as I was given information and do you have or can you comment on
whatever species have been um that have been piloted these craft how are they
large are they are they multiple species are they are they what is their size and
how many usually on a crab they’re typically the multiple species people really like with the grays the Nordics
uh people are talking about reptilians and insecttoids it’s not that they’re reptilian or insect away it’s that they
resemble uh to the precipitate a reptile or an insect type human because they
have this a head and four limbs and torso
so large small uh human size human scale and are there are there how many crew
well the well the grays I’m familiar with from uh investigating the crash of
Corona which is mis misnamed the crash of Roswell it’s not the crash in Roswell
it’s the crash of Corona in Mexico uh those were graves those are four foot tall and um the Nordics are typically
human size probably five six feet tall um and same with the people who mis
mislabel reptilian and insect work roughly that height too i haven’t heard
anything about anything seven or eightt tall of that nature
so uh generation folks what we’re going to do here for I think I stepped down at the
wrong time we are going to take a three minute
break for a change here of the panel we’re going to roll right into it if you need to use a restroom please do so but
we are going to truncate this break significantly because we’ve got a lot to cover and you definitely want to stick
around for this next panel as well big round of applause for our
panelist so they might have to get out here
we’re
watching USA
obviously
[Music] I like your watch by the way oh thanksi love it i love it he knew it too he like
terrible all these
Please take your seats
take your seats everybody we’re about to begin
great
all right folks uh we can shut that door we’re going to get rolling here i want to be cognizant of the representative’s
time
all right folks the next part of this uh panel discussion will
involve national security before we
begin to share something with
you share this with you this
morning very conversation talk national security a
lot and our pilots for
us are
commercial for Congress to taken by a camera i just received permission
today object and look at the shadow being
cast by a civilian pilot now why is this important
this taken from a civilian pilot right not a fle system not an
infrared system but an average person with an average camera at 21,000 ft and the
object potentially is anywhere between 600 to,000 ft in diameter
particular object and it is silver now I cannot vouch for the veracity of this
photograph i didn’t take it but this is an example of one of many
many [Music] many incidents involving commercial and private pilots guess what they don’t
know where to report it guess what congress has no idea that this is happening on a regular
basis that’s the problem why is this relevant because right now you’re going to hear from two speakers i’ll introduce
you to them in a moment who uh who are experts in national security and have been
following this topic for some time i’d like to do is introduce you to Mr chris
Melon first and foremost chris Melon is
a former boss boss boss he was a senior
staff director if I’m not mistaken uh here in the Senate at the time with Bill
Cohen Senator Bill Cohen and then later went to the Department of Defense and became the first uh what you might call
the under secretary of defense for intelligence the position before there was a dazzy the deputy assistant
secretary of defense where basically Chris was responsible for all the intelligence equities
globally globally for the department of defense right anything from human
operations to special access programs and everything else
um Chris has been a spearhead in public engagement getting
the academic community the scientific community everybody intelligence community all to
apply their efforts and time and talent and resources to
this very real problem the next individual uh is Mr kana
uh senior mil former senior military officer as well and very senior staffer
on the Senate side for the Senate Armed Services Committee who was instrumental
in helping get Dr eric Davis to provide classified briefings to certain members
of Congress i won’t say who that’s not my place to say um Kirk has been in the shadows for a
very long time and he has been extremely effective in getting this topic at the
highest to the attention of the highest levels of our government and that to include other administrations as well
not just this one and the one before but the one before that as well um so with
that said there’s a whole lot more could go and I could spend probably half an hour going over their academic week today and their accomplishments um but
rather what I’d like to do is spend some of that time instead and allowing them to have a discussion with you here today
and some questions i think Chris Melon first has some presentation he’d like to provide so I’m going to give the floor
to Chris Melon please welcome our our new panel
there would you like to present that maybe I’ll come up there a little better
thank you for that overly uh kind introduction and uh my thanks to the to
the congressman for taking time out of their busy schedules to be here with us and everyone else who contributed
especially Jordan Flowers i just returned from uh South America uh for
about 4 weeks and uh um promised I would not work on anything related to UAP the
whole time and uh got back here and made a quick turn uh a little under the
weather wouldn’t have a briefing if it wasn’t for uh for Jordan and uh and his assistance uh what I want to talk about
uh is I don’t think the public is aware of the extent of our airspace
vulnerabilities and failures and the degree to which they’ve already been exploited and are being exploited today
and the challenge that we face in trying to sort this out i also want to pivot a
little bit based on uh earlier conversations i wasn’t uh going to get
into this so much but Dr lo talked about spending a billion dollars or so to
develop new sensors to collect information one of my career frustrations in the intelligence
community has been that we have incredible sensors that are far more than a billion
dollars and we have a great many of them and they are collecting information
today which is directly pertinent to this topic but that information is not
reaching congress it’s not reaching the scientific community uh in many cases I
don’t think it’s reaching the arrow which is the office that congress established to study and evaluate this
phenomenon so if we could have the first slide please uh what is this you want to
do that Yeah so here’s just a little overview of
uh the topics I’m going to touch on which is the word shocking I think is uh
is not an exaggeration or hyperbole in this case uh we really are effectively
naked from an air defense standpoint when it comes to these drones uh I’ll talk and provide very specific examples
to illustrate that uh and the UAP uh and Um let me begin
here okay this is a unfortunately I don’t have this right in front of me but
this is a map that displays roughly the coverage provided by something called
the solid state phased array radar system these are reportedly the most
powerful emitters on the planet if there are other civilizations in nearby solar
systems they’re more likely to detect these emitters than probably anything else on our planet uh how many UAP would
you guess they have detected in say the last 20
years that have been reported to Arrow zero zero zero
how is it possible that the most powerful radar I’ve been writing about this for years by the way
fecklessly this is not a new point the training of Congress is somebody in Congress to listen to this and pay
attention for years and Kirk will will testify to that in the armed services committee because I keep going up there
and have been for years say guys how come this thing never detects any UAV how is that possible these are the most
powerful emitters on the planet and look at the area they cover and oh by the way
when you look at the area they cover we keep having reports over and over again
from tactical systems from ships plane and aircraft in the areas covered by
these radar so Eegis ships planes flown by
uh Mr ryan here and his naval aviator colleagues and others are reporting UAE
uh UAP constantly in these areas but somehow these systems never seem to see
a UAP ever how is that possible how come
nobody’s asking about that is this a Chinese balloon situation where all we
need to do is tweak the filters and lo and behold we’re going to bring into
focus something which is uh if drones if nothing else they’re a vital absolutely
vital uh air security significance we know that in Russia and
Ukraine today drones are causing more casualties and killing more people than
any other weapon system right so this is utterly transformed
warfare as we know it here’s a multi-billion dollar system it’s up and
running this is the successor to the old ballistic missile early warning system so its primary function is to detect
ballistic missiles coming over the poles from Russia or China or from North Korea and to develop intercept solutions
uh but it also has a mission of detecting sea launch cruise missiles and bombers and so forth so there’s a couple
there’s one of several possibilities either we’ve spent billions of dollars on a system that’s
not performing as it should be or uh it just you know maybe needs some
some tweaks in the filters to expand the the range of things that reports on a
you know one of the challenges with these systems is to avoid clutter right because they’re so powerful they collect
so much they’ve got to filter it down so what’s being displayed is reasonable and
appropriate to the mission uh it could be a problem of that sort or it’s simply
so highly classified that the information is not reaching arrow i favor the latter i think that’s
what’s going on and I think if Congress were to to poke hard on this uh maybe
get an inspector general to look at these possible options or otherwise uh
look into this they they would get some answers question is that data from that
system being archived i believe so i don’t know how far back
they go and how how that’s a great question we don’t know how far back it goes and uh one of the things so when
you approach NORAD about this or the Air Force and you start asking about this data and what are they seeing so right
now my understanding is by the way that they don’t even tell Arrow uh which
whose director supposedly cleared for everything they don’t even tell him when they scramble fighter aircraft to
conduct intercepts so they’re regularly scrambling fighter aircraft i’ve talked to and interviewed on television a NORED
officer who told an account of walking into Cheyenne Mountain uh where he uh
for duty and everybody was standing on their feet looking at the big screen and there was a UAP coming down from the
Arctic along the east coast United States and the commanderin-chief of Nor
said quote I want that thing and everybody said yes sir and they were
watching everything we have in the east coast couldn’t get it near it couldn’t get a radar lock uh it disappeared out
over the southern Atlantic is that the only time that ever happened the one time that this NORAD
officer gave this account in the 1990s when the system was much less capable than it is today and we were seeing
fewer uh things than we are today and and fewer intrusions over restricted
airspace i rather doubt it uh this is by the way only one of a number of
multibillion dollar systems that are already deployed they’re collecting data that
bears directly on this topic that don’t seem to be reporting anything to Arrow
so Arrow issued a report in their last report they said we don’t have anything
in they haven’t seen any UAP in space but there were I think 40 instances in
which groundbased reporters like civilian airline pilots reported things
far above beyond what they call the Karman line and 100,000 ft which is what
they consider outer space for these purposes now there’s another system
called the groundbased electrooptical uh deep space surveillance system which
is a ring of cameras circling the globe that does nothing but the night sky all
night long how come those systems didn’t detect what these pilots are talking
about they’re looking up saying “I saw these bright lights moving etc etc.”
Well there’s one of these cameras on top of uh of uh our one of our highest peaks
in Hawaii and it does nothing but stare at the night sky that same night sky all night long did it miss that was it a
cloudy night have any of those cameras ever collected one of these incidents
they said there were 40 uh I would think somebody ought to take an inventory and say we want to
know which of these surveillance systems is reporting UAP and uh which are not and
what specifically are they reporting take an inventory again is there a systemic problem or failure with these
systems the taxpayers spending billions of dollars i would think we would want to know that now interestingly with
regarding to the GI system I uh one on one occasion had a colleague who was
visiting for a sort of routine oversight uh purpose many years ago and I said
“While you’re there Pete why don’t you ask them if they ever seen anything
strange?” I didn’t want to say flying saucer but that’s what I was alluding to and he knew what I was talking about so
he asked the question and sure enough this the month before on that one
occasion when the question was asked they had indeed collected uh
photographic imagery of what was a four or five objects moving through the night sky and formation traveling parallel to
the earth’s surface i don’t know that the question has ever been asked since that was
probably 20 years ago i find it hard to believe that in all
that time that they haven’t collected anything relevant to this question and I
don’t understand why that data is not getting error i don’t know if anyone has
again has even got a checklist to make sure that when Congress issued this
directive and said you’re going to there’s a reporting requirement now everybody needs to report this stuff it
needs to go to the Air Force to filter down through the commands is anything coming back up from these systems do
these people even know they’re supposed to report and is there any reporting of that kind going on there’s another
system called the space-based infrared system multibillion dollar system this
is again in the unclassified domain what I’m talking about here there’s quite a
bit you know additionally that is paid for by the taxpayer that’s pertinent
it’s a very robust system with satellites in multiple orbits highly elliptical orbits geospatial orbits very
high precision it’s looking for infrared uh and heat kinds of events uh as far as
I know they have detected reported arrow zero UAP
incidents okay maybe nothing happened maybe they haven’t seen anything but it
does make you wonder in this case it’s particularly strange since we know there
are dozens if not hundreds of UAP incidents happening within the areas
that this system is supposed to provide coverage of for example famous Nimis
incident occurred excuse me almost directly in front of the radar at Be Air
Force Base right off the coast and this went on for about a week or so and you had
objects descending from 60,000 ft and back up so I don’t think anyone could
say “Well they were so small they were so close to the water it wasn’t within range of the radar.”
These things were at very high altitudes and this was going on on a sustained
basis so my suspicion is now I understand that that data could be
highly classified i could understand why it might not be in the quality domain what I can’t understand is why Arrow
does not seem to be aware of this data if it exists and why the appropriate congressional committees do not seem to
be aware of and informed of this do I realistically expect the new thing to
happen because I’m raising this here no because I’ve been doing this for years
but what the heck we’re here might as well try again
um let’s go on to uh to the next slide so
uh we have uh uh an incredible series of
events that have been happening i wrote an article a year ago to this month
called Who’s Operating the Drones Plaguing the US Military and uh uh it
did actually get read by a producer for 60 minutes who subsequently did a piece
which featured several uh fourstar officers who in fact confirmed what I
was discussing and alleging in the article uh with regard to the events
that occurred at Langley Air Force Base and elsewhere is truly shocking here’s
the Air Combat Command which is supposed to be protecting these gentlemen in this
institution where we’re sitting in Capitol Hill and the White House and the US government and they can’t protect
their own airspace they have to move uh our cutting edge F22 fighter squadron to
a Navy base from the Air Force base and this is going on for I forget how
long it was couple of weeks roughly uh and we’re talking
about strange craft bright lights appearing over this
base making it unsafe to fly night after night after
night and to this day we have no idea where they were coming from we don’t know their capabilities we all know who
who was controlling them and that remains true not just for that base and that incident but for numerous other
bases so the first incident and the war zone is a great source for people
interested in this topic by the way terrific reporting 2018 in Guam we’ve
installed a $1.5 billion anti-bballistic missile
system and these brightly lit small craft show up they go right to the
missile battery and they’re shining bright lights down on it like they’re photographing and this happens two
nights in a row so back in 2018 it wasn’t apparent as it is now but
obviously those drones could have been weaponized they could have easily taken that battery out and eviscerated the the
uh ballistic missile defense on our leading facility in the Pacific not to
mention the fact I just went to that uh to Google Maps this morning to check that air base and that air base like
Langley unlike some of the others has very few hardened shelters
so those multiund million dollar aircraft that are on the runway could
easily be destroyed by drones that are costing what a few thousand
bucks okay that’s how vulnerable we
are then in 2019 we began to see this activity off the coast of the United
States in California and I’ll read a little uh excerpt from one of those
reports uss Paul Hamilton observed four UAS with the closest point of approach
approximately 200 yards off the bow port and starboard
beams they had a uh ontime station of approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes so
if you ever if you have children and you have drones at home you know that they
usually are have a maximum time of about 20 minutes okay these were in station
for 2 hours and 20 minutes 60 80 miles off the shore uh not
apparent where they could have been launched from what their total uh dwell time was uh the anti-UAS systems on the
ship were ineffective in uh in bringing them down the first UAS spotted by
lookouts at 240 uh observed with a single white
light they wanted to report others within 500 yards maneuvering four and
app with four white lights and a crashing red light they’re not trying to be sly they’re not trying to be
clandestine approximately 200 yards above the ship again maneuvering right
around the ship back and forth up and down uh they went to the bridge of the
ship with a powerful search light or photographic device so they’re actually
we’ve had cases where they go right up to the bridge of the ship and shine a bright light in on the captain of the
senior crew that’s how overt and provocative this is and
that apparently reflects their degree of confidence that we can’t intercept them
and bring them down whoever it is that’s operating that same year we began to see
them around nuclear power plants in 2020 very strange uh situation out west
this went on not just for weeks this went on for months in one of the least densely
populated there’s a slide that kind of shows I think maybe it’s back uh roughly the part of the region we’re talking
about here yeah eastern Colorado and western
Oklahoma so we’re talking about farmland i drove out west team last winter and
drove kind of through that area it is incredibly sparsely populated there is
uh there is very very very little there and yet these drones were operating in
groups clusters as many as 40 drones at a time they formed a uh this was so
extensive and there was so much u uh eventual fur raised among the ranchers
and farmers that they formed a task force involving the FBI Department of
Homeland Security local law enforcement they deployed a special plane that the
governor of California authorized that had sensors on it and this continued to occur and we never found out where these
things were coming from who was operating them i called a sheriff there and spoke to him about it he told me a
fascinating story he said he was actually a deputy sheriff but the sheriff was also witness they responded
to a call and there were a group of these lights over this farm and uh a
brighter light came in a larger light and the smaller lights went inside of it
and it took off at an extreme velocity and passed almost directly over the
sheriff and the deputy and he told me “I’ve never seen anything move that fast.” He’s also in
the military reserves uh this individual so uh and that report by the
way he called it a mothership uh it’s not just a story that I happen to hear
if you look at the documentation from Air Force Office special investigation the FBI and so
forth you’ll see written documentation from other witnesses that refers to a
mothership so this is actually well documented very strange and very
concerning uh we don’t know what is in operating in our airspace and this
continues often in militarily sensitive areas 2023 Arizona test ranges you’ve
heard about Langley but we do a lot of flying in the southwest flying
conditions are great it’s a terrific place for the Air Force we have large air force bases there and the some of
the strange things we’re seeing in the number and the rate and frequency
with which this is happening is extraordinary so um this includes now your average drone
is restricted to a flight of 450 ft we’ve got F-35s and F-22s well in
this case F-35s they’re encountering drones at 15,000 feet 17,000 feet
35,000 feet going 500 miles
hour in restricted military airspace meanwhile in the adjacent area
and I included in my PowerPoint briefing you can find uh videos from the
Department of Homeland Security nine of them about some of the strange things that they’re seeing on the
border very very odd things now this raises a little bit of an issue that
I’ve written about recently also um with the hope that that it might
prove some assistance to this task force which is why is it the Department of Homeland Security can publish all these
videos but Arrow can’t and DoD can’t there was a hearing before Congress a
few years ago with Mr ray from the Navy and he said “I assure you I’m going to review these videos and make sure that
we get out to you and the public everything we can.” Um I think maybe
there’s been one video in three years since then uh when I’ve looked into this
and talked to people at different parts of the federal government and so forth they’ve basically said nobody feels it’s
their job to turn this over to the public nobody wants to make the effort to
submit it for public release so back in 2017 I provided three unclassified
videos to the New York Times you’ve all seen those gimbal Fleer Go Fast right
there are a lot more like that they just haven’t been released because shortly after that somebody created a
classification guide which suddenly said in contradiction to the executive order
on classification signed by the president that anything essentially anything having to do with UAP is now
suddenly mystically classified because it might damage national security even though
those three videos the FBI the the Office of Special uh Investigations Air
Force investigated confirmed they were classified not only did they not damage
national security they helped national security they helped raise an awareness for the public for Congress that we have
an air defense problem here and the scientific community is very eager to
get more of those kinds of videos because they want to train AI systems they want to know what it is we’re
looking for they want to measure the signatures there’s a lot they can contribute to this but the bureaucracy
uh is not responding and I think there I couldn’t put a number on it but I
believe that if someone were to to poke that system and force them to review
that classification guide if someone were to establish some advocacy for
taking that which is truly unclassified and admittedly absolutely there are many
things videos that would be are appropriately classified not questioning that what I am saying is that there are
others that fall into this camp that would have value to the public value to
Congress value to the scientific community and this is not an expensive
proposition it’s just a matter of getting somebody to focus on
and and put these through the process and uh I think the public not
only has a right to know I think it’s beyond that i think there’s a it’s
there’s a utilitarian function there’s great value in the public knowing this
information and value to the scientific community in having this information uh
I give the example sometimes of what happened with and I promise to get off the stage like real fast um so I’m
starting I’m starting to fall into my own uh stuff here that I get into but um
the uh this funding program I have no doubt if they could have kept it secret the CIA would not have told the American
people the Russians had a satellite in orbit and we wouldn’t have had the space
program when we did we wouldn’t have gotten to the moon when we did uh because the people have gotten fired up
and said “Oh my god this is not acceptable that the Russians are ahead of us and we need to act.” And Congress
took action and it was uh you know it actually ironically we
ended up collaborating with the Russians in space and it actually helped from you know facilitate some peaceful uh
developments and relations i think there are a lot of uh benefits along those
lines that uh that could acrue but it’s going to take some uh
some effort and uh on the part of um uh Congress I think to compel this to
happen if it’s going to happen so with that I will close and thank our
congressional sponsors for taking an interest in this and giving us the opportunity to express
our concerns and uh share what we uh what we’ve learned thus far about this
problem thank you can I ask a second question this high resolution 4K videos
of UAP is this stuff that you know about or is this stuff that you’ve seen well there’s some stuff that I’ve seen and
and uh I’ve asked about and I think there is one video I’ve seen that they’re going to
declassify and um I hope that happens um it wasn’t for
I would say it was 4K it was more like what you’ve seen you know is infrared
sensor gun camera video along the lines of what the New York Times published in
the Washington Post subsequently uh so it’s that kind of of
video from that sensor system so we know it exists it’s there oh yeah yeah yeah and now by the way we are at a point now
where the Arrow has received
uh somewhere in the neighborhood of 1,800 military
reports 1,800 in just the last few years i Some of those are iPhone videos
so I don’t think there’s a big source as a method issue there there’s there’s a variety of some are
from you know stuff you get at Best Buy from sailors on the ship with a video camera that uh there’s got to be a
number in that mix that could be revealed and uh beyond that as I said I
think there’s a lot of high caliber sensor data the American people have
already paid for for many of these sensors are out there many of them and they’re collecting pertinent data
obvious Dr lo has benefited from the data that had to do with the re-entry of
the interstellar vehicle it was a great example of a taxpayer funded system that
contributed to science in a very meaningful way i’m here to tell you I think there’s a lot
more to that kind of thing that could be made available if someone did a thorough
assessment of the sensor systems that we have and what they’re collecting and
took a hard look at the classification issues we also had a system a uh
precedented ones where we cleared for global warming some scientists to look at some classified data relating to that
scientific problem set and that’s conceivably another it has there’s problems with that because scientists
want to be able to publish of course they want their colleagues to be able to see everything possible about the
sources but there are variety of opportunities I think we’re missing at the same time there’s a huge huge
national security issue here and we’ve got stuff in our skies some of it could
represent technological surprise that we need to find out about it you’ve got
these unmanned systems at 35,000 ft that’s a mile higher than top of Mount
Everest going 500 miles an hour in restricted military airspace i would say we’ve got a lot of
work to do [Applause]
well thank you Chris just as I do not have the advantage of height that you do
so I have to bring this way down um I think uh Chris brings up a very
good point and the reason why I decided to share this photograph with you taken from a civilian pilot now is because the
same challenges that our pilots or military pilots are facing as to where
to report it who’s going to analyze it what do you do with the information multiply that for the
civilian aviation community do they report to the FAA do they report to NORA
maybe the Air Force maybe a civilian organization right who’s responsible for getting this information now again let
me caveat this is not vetted this was taken by a civilian pilot but once again you would think
this information would be important for somebody to look at certainly someone in
government certainly some some of our representatives that are sitting here right this these are over sensitive
military installations whose are they what are their capabilities what are the intent right um but enough of me right
now let’s let’s let’s go on to uh our our second expert here uh Mr kirk
McConnell i could sit here all day once again these these guests are just unbelievable um Kirk my question is for
you and I’m going to go off script here for a minute you have deep expertise and experience with the Senate Armed
Services Committee what is right now the greatest challenge you see for our
Congress to tackle this topic on behalf of the American people what is if you
had to narrow it down to one one to three challenges especially for our reps
here that are sitting with us here today so patiently what would be in your
estimate the three greatest challenges facing Congress tackling this topic
well I I I would speculate i’m I’m not a lengthy can you all hear back there
how’s that um I certainly don’t want to speak for Congress uh you know I I do want to
mention that um I did serve 37 years as a staff member on Capitol Hill for
Senate Armed Services Committee and both the House and Senate intelligence committees uh I was not in the military
got that wrong uh but uh so I’ve been up here a long time but I have no voting
never have i have tremendous respect for the institution um and I don’t uh intend
to reveal sort of inside baseball information um but uh you know what I
would say is uh on a topic like this my sense is that Congress needs a lot of
confidence to push really vigorously and where are they going to
get that confidence that there is an absolute assurance that there’s a
reality here and I think as much evidence as has been accumulated in the
public domain over such a long period of time it is subject to uh to question and
we all know how that has has proceeded over a good period of decades
um the key to this in my opinion is firsthand sources who can testify to
direct involvement in this so-called legacy program of crash retrievalss of
reverse engineering um unfortunately uh there are people out
there I I believe from from many reports that uh are interested in coming forward
and telling their story but they are very much intimidated and
frightened about doing that uh they’re afraid of u of the consequences
including their own personal safety is what they relate their personal safety
certainly their career u starting with their security clearances which is the means that they have to make a living um
and they have observed uh some folks uh who have come forward not to mention you
Lou and Dave Rush and have seen uh what those folks have gone True and
most of them say “Yeah I’m not doing that.” So I think we’re we’re sort of in
a in a tough situation it’s almost like u you know catch 22 um we need we need
more uh more primary sources uh but it’s hard to get people with that kind of uh
that kind of information to come forward because of of the fear of retaliation we
need a better whistle blower thank you sir that’s uh something that I’m sure as you know has been discussed in both the
Senate and the House why don’t you draw me something up really tight yes sir um
so uh whistleblower protections is uh and and you know finding ways to
even compensate them if they do uh have negative consequences from coming
forward uh and so forth so I I certainly uh I certainly think this
is this is a ma a major a major factor i would just let you ask the next
question actually Chris jump yeah so there was uh
I came prepared to address that issue as well and
yeah I came prepared to contribute what I could to that question as well
but the classified session was cancelled um I think due to the sensitivity of the
names of the individuals and and so forth
um you know I didn’t think it was appropriate to I could do it in an unclassified setting um if they do
reschedu a classified setting I think uh I’m more than happy to try to provide
some very some specifics uh I published a signal message I received from a very
senior government official he described a specific Secretary of the Air Force
memorandum he described a specific recovery site he described he named the
Air Force gatekeeper for the program uh nobody
from Congress has asked me to follow up on that i have all that information
um you know I was prepared to share what I could about that but um I don’t know
that it would be definitive or lead to any conclusion but uh I do think those
names due to the you know privacy concerns of the individuals and so Obviously it’s pretty sensible so uh I’m
prepared to try to help with that as I can as well but in this session I wanted to address
uh some of these other issues related to declassification ask a general question to either of you what are the
consequences and either or both of you can answer what are the consequences of Congress not taking
action on this topic from a national security perspective
well the uh you heard uh Dr eric Davis um
expressing expressing u his understanding of the state of
affairs in this arena which namely which which is that the program the legacy
program call it that has uh has uh has been sort of stalled that
um we’re not uh we’re not making the use of allegedly making the best use of the
best minds in the country um the compartmentalization allegedly has
prevented the kind of coordination and uh collaboration between
uh scientists to really uh you know practice very difficult set
of physics problems um and uh and that I’m sure that the security uh element uh
that’s had to be applied to this uh to this uh activity has uh come with a lot
of costs in terms of uh effectively managing managing the program and it is
alleged that this even extends uh within the executive branch that very senior
uh leaders in the executive branch aren’t aware of this and are not uh um
you know managing the effort so it it doesn’t it’s not a leap uh or stretch to
to suppose that we’re hampering ourselves immensely by this continued uh
compartmentation um and certainly Congress does not know whether this
activity is being managed appropriately or not we don’t know if it’s got the right level of resources it’s got the
right management structure the right incentives and so on and so forth um you know we think our government can
work pretty well when we’re when we’re managing things according to to the
rules um and uh so I I think that this
is uh this is a a detriment to national security the lack of of oversight and
and and awareness it’s certainly possible to keep properly classified
things classified and still have effective oversight and management both
in the executive branch and speaking of uh of keeping
national security and and secrets classified which I completely agree with
there are very specific reasons why you want to keep certain aspects of this topic classified sources and methods etc
maybe certain capabilities but let me ask this is a question probably for for you Mr melton
in your opinion what are the I’m trying to become Mr well I
because uh the fact I’m not wearing a tie I have to make up for some i’ve already been accused of being used to
see me in the suit too casual and too lax so I’m trying to trying to be more formal here chris um in your opinion
what are the consequences of retroactively classifying information
previously unclassified and are you aware of any specific incidence of
information or data that was unclassified that is now classified
well as I mentioned earlier I I think there’s piles of that stuff and I think
there’s so much of it it’s kind of hard to gauge what the consequences are because my understanding is that they
adopted the classification guide which basically says anything and everything do with
UAP is classified here for now people who haven’t read the executive order may
not be aware the executive order says when in doubt you should heir on the
side of going unclassified it heirs you’re supposed to
heir on the side of transparency and openness to the American people and we’re talking about many of
these videos uh if an F18 clear targeting pod video was
unclassified in 2017 and we’re not talking about denied area or some other
unusual exception how can it be classified two years when you take the same video from
the same system in the same area two years later i don’t get it but that
looks like what they did and it avoids typ I argued vificiously against it at
the time i knew some of the people involved and tried to make the argument to that guy is we wouldn’t even be here
we wouldn’t be having a discussion if information hadn’t gotten into the public
domain via Congress and the press and that’s why we’ve made the progress we’ve
made today now you want to drop the curtain on everything what do you you know what I
don’t get it so um I can’t really gauge the the implications but I do think
they’re negative and I think it’s it’s inappropriate i think it’s probably
unlawful uh my last question here before we move to a very short break for the next panel i want to be respectful of
time of both the congressional members and of course um our panelists as
well this next question goes to you Kirk um you mentioned a little bit about
whistleblowers and I know that from my understanding um and you don’t have to talk about it but I know you received
classified briefings before on this topic from specific subject matter experts and some of your colleagues
what can Congress do specifically members such as Reposen Repet Rep Luna
her colleagues to better protect whistleblowers to incentivize individuals to come forward
and provide at a minimum unclassified information in a way that they don’t
have to worry about retribution to their careers perhaps much worse and
classified information in the proper venue what what can Congress do to to
help improve that flow of information and minimize the reprisals that some of us have have faced in the past
uh Lou I would uh I would first off like to say that um that uh there is a an
option like people who do come forward and want to talk to uh committees in
Congress don’t have to go public um they can and have uh come to the armed
services committees the intelligence committees and uh
in in confidence on a classified basis have related what they know and what
their experiences um um the members who have uh who have
received that kind of uh of accounts and witness statements uh
have protected the identity of of such people and they have um
they have thereby been protected um the the the uh negative side of that
is that the members uh can’t go around and tell their colleagues uh uh what
they they have learned because that’s uh that risks the identity of people that
have come forward and gain confidence and therefore it doesn’t it doesn’t empower members to then uh uh
procilitize and and get everyone uh geared up to really make a strong
investigatory push um but it is an it is an option uh for for people to consider
um I would also uh say that um uh we have a gentleman here in the audience
who has uh uh conducted a legal uh history of uh people who uh
come forward to make uh classified uh statements to Congress over long
period of time and uh he tells me that uh he can’t find an
where someone coming forward and giving classified information to Congress
without sort of formal permission from the executive branch that there’s never been I hope
I’m getting this right there’s never been an indictment or much less a prosecution for doing that um now I I
certainly I’m not a lawyer and I certainly uh don’t want to encourage people to uh to sort of break the rules
as they see as they understand them and what they’re bound to by agreements that
they sign but it is at least something to think about
um and uh and and potentially act on that obviously takes a lot of courage to
do that i just like to this a little bit of a nonseer but our panel is coming to an
end and I I did want to make share a concern I have which is that we have two
different issues here we have UAP objects that we’re observing uh in
flight active around military facilities and we have an issue of of possible
recovery of materials uh these two issues in the public
It’s entirely possible that we might not have recovered materials but UAP are very real and here addressing it it’s an
urgent issue and I have a concern that if that issue is not in some way
validated or addressed it runs the risk of discrediting the entire topic and
we’ve made enormous progress uh nothing happened essentially from the
blue book days until 2017 uh and I I fear that if there isn’t
some uh effective way of addressing this that we run the risk of a major setback
i don’t know how secure arrow is in the long term i’m not seeing interest on the
part of the chairman of the committees that fund it on the armed services and
intelligence committees they don’t seem to be engaged or supportive at this point for defense approach so I think
we’re in somewhat tenuous ground is probably in a better position to address this than me but I
think the second call if you were to confirm that and how do you manage that
who deals with that it’s such a transformational issue that it cannot be
a press release that comes out from a you know from from Congress some
afternoon Friday afternoon or something it’s a literally cosmic issue that runs
the risk of having of terrifying tens of millions hundreds of millions of people
right so it’s a very complex interrelated set of issues
and I think we and whoever in Congress is fired over this really needs to think
through how to handle the two of those things and uh our foundation obviously
wants to help if we can but I don’t I think it’s a tough
challenge for members who are very very busy people with a lot on their plates
in the I’m I’m going to make an exception i’m going to continue this conversation because there’s a question I want to ask
it’s very very important related to with their expertise go ahead well I I wanted to get to the question that you actually
ask about whistleblower protections and I’m by no means an expert or even really
conversant uh on the topic of whistleblower protections um but um you
know applying a common sense kind of standard um you know you need to you
need to have uh we need to have legislation that uh that really is
strong uh you know there’s a long record of whistleblowers despite whistleblower
protections in the law uh they get retaliated against and they
they lose their jobs they lose their careers and
uh it happens with enough regularity that no one could blame people for not
wanting not wanting a business so the legislation would need to be would need
to be very robust and I think it would need to include things like restitution
possibility of uh of uh of uh the government making good on the loss of uh
loss of their career loss of security clearances if it comes to that and uh
and and making uh you know making making sure that uh that people are not going
to u you know suffer these consequences
um even though the law says they should never have suffered those consequences you got you got to clean up the mess uh
that that that tends to happen here um so anyway I uh I limit myself to
those so one last question i know you said it before i’m going to again break the rule here real quick but I’m going to ask you very quickly let’s try to if
we can big question but try to keep succeed if we can um and this is for both of you and and I think uh this is
part of the challenge that Congress faces okay so you have we all want to protect national security how do you
separate protecting blue force technologies perhaps perhaps hypothetically gain from the insights of
UAP recovery programs but at the same time leveling with the American people about the
reality the fundamental reality that that we a we do not have a current understanding of everything in our sky
right US air domain awareness we do not have a complete sight picture and two that there may be
technologies that are not from us and um that warrant further investigation again
but at the same time protecting if we have any technologies hypothetically that have been developed as a result
well um Lou you know uh we heard from Dr davis that and and many others who
believe that we haven’t made much progress uh in in with respect to
deciphering what the physics are behind and these c they’re coming here
uh at the same time I mean we don’t really know that that is true we haven’t made progress maybe we make great
progress and and that we have stuff ourselves that that could be uh that
could be pretty marvelous right um and certainly there can be absolutely vital
uh reasons for protecting that kind of information um I mean
has crossed my mind is uh you know people say you know if the United States government has been
into this why in the world wouldn’t the government have made these kinds of technologies
known for the betterment of our citizens and for mankind and you know one thought
is like what if it what if once you understand the science what if the
engineering I know uh Eric Davis thinks that we’re you know we’re maybe a thousand years from being able to do
this but but what if that’s uh what if it’s not true and you know the
government is on the horns of a dilemma like it’s got energy sources that might be an absolute boon to mankind but it
also is looking at the weaponization of that and it’s terrifying um and so you
know gee is there a way that you can exploit that for your own benefit militarily but keeping this uh uh
keeping this thing somehow this genie bottled up uh where it doesn’t um come
into the hands of a of a North Korean dictator um so uh I I don’t have answers i Lou I
think uh I think you’ve got to deal with this uh this range of uh of um of
possibilities but the first thing you got to do is understand it right we have to we have to understand what the
government knows and until we do it’s going to be hard to develop a rational
strategy for managing this i don’t know
until I don’t think I’ll do manage it leave it at that i’ve said too much
already and I’m eager to get off the stage and turn it over all right folks three
minutes thank you very much [Applause] [Music]
please take your seats
quit the meeting like this
coach please take your seats
i get the same
folks please take your seats
anybody who’s standing up please take your seats unless you are part of the
camera group so folks folks uh let me first extend my
sincere appreciation and thanks for everyone’s patience um as you can see we could probably stay all day with just
one panelist alone lot to discuss we are barely scratching the surface here um
the next discussion is really going to be part of a scientific discussion and so the two panelists you have here are
experts in their own fields uh and and recognized um as a as a global leader in
their particular expertise so what I’d like to do first is introduce Miss Anna
Brady Estz founding partner at American Deep Tech former SBA innovation advisor
for Kaufman a Kaufman fellow and uh on the UAPF advisory board but what you may
not know is that uh Miss Brady Estz is
deeply involved with the National Science Foundation um and that involvement really includes
looking at pioneering new ways to invest American talent scientific talent
into new and emerging areas of science right where do we where do we
decide to put our money and our effort in the next 20 years right where do we get that return on investment what does
that look like right and how do we how do we force ourselves to think outside the box to to be creative
don’t invent tomorrow’s technology invent the technology after
tomorrow and it’s that type of creative thinking that has traditionally kept
this country ahead of everybody else and uh I ask you to when she when
she speaks um listen to what she has to say because this is in my opinion this is the future
not just this topic but any topic requiring innovation because if you don’t innovate you stagnate if you don’t
stagnate you perish that’s just the bottom line right we live in a competitive world the next individual is
a uh colleague and friend of mine Mr mike Gold Mr whiteville is president of
the civil and international space uh at Redwire member of the NASA UAP
independent study team former NASA associate administrator for space policy
and partnerships former acting associate administrator for the office of international and inter agency relations
and senior adviser to the administrator for international and legal affairs former vice president for civil space at
Maxar Technologies former director of DC operations and business growth at Val
Aerospace you might remember that word from somewhere else had that involvement and last but certainly not least uh as a
um member of NASA am I correct to say a a mission manager uh with the
Aremis team is that did I get that right because I’ve got two things wrong so far today so I want to make sure they’re
right i’m a recovering attorney they wouldn’t let me close the prior mission so I was the architect of the Artemis of
course however the global partnership with 54 countries to explore moon Mars and beyond
excellent and that’s it right explore explore moons moon Mars and beyond um
there is a um something for you to consider there was an estimate done that
um the future of man mankind our species um is not here in fact if you were to
look at the financial opportunities it was estimated that 1* 10^ the 18th 18th
power amount of money this this world has ever made globally in all its time
as modern civilization multiply that by a factor of 18 and that’s the value of the
resources that lie within the inner asteroid belt of our solar system right
so so the future is there as a microbiologist an imologist there’s one
primary directive for all life systems that we know and that’s to expand if you don’t expand you will perish in fact you
can look at a petri dish if you put the right amount of nutrients bacteria will do the same take a plant give it
nutrients and water it will grow and take over that is the primary director of wildlife and we are no exception to
that so keep that in mind as these two individuals are going to talk to you uh
about uh about the importance of this topic the UAP topic and how it relates to the scientific community um am I
mistaken that you have a you have a presentation for us so what I’d like to do is turn it over uh first of all welcome our two guests our esteemed
guests and um ma’am did you have presentation or you going to do the just questions and answers i’ll go verbal
yeah okay verbal got it mike come on up and let’s uh get you started thanks so much is it okay if I move from here yeah
yeah great wonderful pleasure in terms of expansion I can tell you my doctor says I’m expanding far too much every
day yeah me too lot of trouble thank you so much Lou not only for today but for
all you have done to push this topic you are an American hero as well as the congressman and many others in this room
from you know the journalists to the scientists the advocates the pilots it’s just an honor to be here i appreciate
what everyone has done also thank you Redwater directors for letting me out of the meeting early that was a wonderful
discussion i think this is going to be a lot more exciting if I could point you to my opening slide that is actually an
image taken by the blue ghost lunar lantern with red wire Argus cameras i’m going to get in why that is such an
extraordinary image in a moment but before we get there uh we were having a discussion about
substances and what these new substances look like new materials what this UAP
technology would be and I’ve been given the challenging if not unenviable task of saying how could UAP technology
impact innovation without knowing quite what that UAP technology is uh even
fundamentally so what I’d like to try and do today is give you an example of how microg gravity is impacting
innovation and really almost every industrial field and how that could be
transformative i don’t know if extraterrestrial civilizations are using this i think they likely would be but I
think this is an example of how a fundamental shift in technology can change everything uh our company Redwire
has been conducting experiments on the International Space Station on the space shuttle for literally decades we have
flown hundreds of experiments over the past 35 plus years we have 11 experiments active on the International
Space Station right now more than any other company you see Senator John Glenn running one of our experiments there the
first one I’d like to show you is the biofabrication facility the BFF we’re
great at acronyms at Redwire if you can play the video please this is by the way an over 400 pound payload it broke the
table at our facility in Greenville Indiana much easier to handle in orbit
that astronaut a cup span working very quickly of coffee at 20 times speed but
he’s installing what is a biofabrication unit and that system has
allowed us to manufacture human tissue in space it resulted in the first human
meniscus being printed in space who needs a meniscus
no I could probably use two right exactly this is the impact of
microgravity that if you try to create that meniscus on Earth and again I’m a recovering attorney so I’m going to put
it simply it squishes you couldn’t do that in a gravity environment it’s not space per se it’s the lack of gravity
that allows you to do these incredible things uh subsequent to the success we
had with the meniscus we printed live cardiovascular tissue and we brought it
back from the International Space Station still live think what this could
mean for people suffering from heart disease the creation of heart patches and of course the goal of all of us is
ultimately to create whole organs in space how many of us have had friends
and relatives die while waiting on an organ donation list this could change
all of that additionally because we would be using your own stem cells to create the tissue the organs we would
avoid the dangerous and expensive anti-rejection therapies that you go
through so we see how microgravity could have a dramatic impact in terms of life
sciences also pharmaceuticals red Wire has flown 28 pill boxes these are
systems where we take pharmaceuticals drugs fly the seed crystals and seed
crystals by the way they’re like a sourdough starting kit they’re what the drugs are made out of and when you
create seed crystals in microgravity they’re larger more uniform and that
results in drugs with better efficacy better longitude fewer side effects
here’s a example that is very near and dear to my heart insulin we partnered with Eli Liy we flew insulin over on the
left side of that that’s what insulin seed crystals look like when you create them on Earth over on the right side
that’s what insulin looks like in space the seed crystals again I got a B minus
in biology as a high school student even I can tell the difference between one and the other and because of those
larger more unifals you could have a version of insulin we’ve seen versions of cancer treatment drugs that whereas
you’d have to go through chemotherapy that would be injected again long painful you could potentially get to a
version of the drug where it could be administered worldly so a tremendous difference here relative to the
pharmaceutical sector and by the way it’s not just us who know this it’s China and the Chinese have their space
station they’re going after the same research so each time Congressman I would ignite as we look at the
international space station replacing it with commercial space station this revolution with biotech and microgravity
is going to happen the only question is it going to happen here in America the free world or is it going to be
happening in China and I do not want to be buying my next generation pharmaceuticals and drugs from the
Chinese so we need to continue to support this and create new developments but this is just life sciences and
biotech again micrograv will impact semiconductors the same principles when you form crystals in space you can
create new types of semiconductors that are more powerful more tolerant of heat agriculture you can create seeds new
types of plants that can flourish in the desert we have a a greenhouse that we’re
flying in space looking at many of that efforts you see that there uh we also have systems for what’s called ZLAN
fiber where it’s a new type of fiber optic that can be incredibly powerful again every aspect of our technological
society could be changed by this innovation is this something that UAP
are using is this new substances that they’re using i don’t know perhaps but you see how this field will
revolutionize everything and I believe in the future the leaders of microgravity will not only be the
leaders in economics but in national security as well as a matter of fact that miniscus print the customer for
that was the uniform services university because the number one injury to our men and women in uniform are meniscus teams
now I’d like to talk about a who wants to see some unclassified data right
let’s talk about some imagery that we’re getting from NASA as Lou mentioned I was proud to be a member of NASA’s UAP
independent study team we had some very common sense recommendations one of
which that I testified here in the House not too long ago alongside the great
Alzando and others was that we need to go into the NASA archives get the
imagery review it make it public and look at what we’ve got this is an
example that hit the internet not too long ago is it Tic Tac it’s on Mars i
don’t know i’m not qualified to say but someone should be looking at it and we should be collecting and collating the
data here’s one that’s even more interesting to me lunar horizon glow
this is a phenomena that we first saw with the surveyor systems this is named
a glow that we’re seeing on the horizon of the moon we saw it with the robotic
surveyors and what you see in the upper left hand side are sketches that Apollo astronauts made of this phenomena a
glowing dome streaks of light shooting out from the lunar surface pretty
extraordinary and then most recently this was my cover slide with the Blue
Ghost system which is NASA’s commercial lunar payload services program Eclipse a wonderful public private partnership to
reach the moon with Redwire Argus cameras we took this image of the lunar
horizon glow what you might hear uh if you go on a NASA website or talk to some in the
scientific community is that this effect is from dust that has been
electrostatically charged and then levitated to create this impact now
again I’m not saying one way or the other but um Dr i should go back and
give him credit uh Dr manett’s dire I’m gonna I’m gonna
mess up his name and I apologize it’s in the slides but a wonderful professor who’s been associated with UAP disclosure fund uh and doing work on
this topic providing these slides and I can tell you NASA’s own research lab
other systems is putting some big question marks as to even if there is enough dust create this effect which
looks unlikely and that if dust could be electrostatically charged to cause what
I mean looks like the second sunrise and that’s not the sun by the way it’s below
the horizon i mean that is an extraordinary image and by the way when
I first saw this picture I was like is that algae on the moon and what you’re
seeing is light refraction occurring due to I don’t know
what so I don’t know what this is is it a dome is it some type of natural
phenomena that we don’t understand aren’t aware of but I’ll tell you definitely it’s a unidentified anomalous
phenomenon which bears looking and bears understanding and this is a good example
too of even if it’s a natural or prosaic phenomenon there’s something
extraordinary currently we should be delving into it we should be studying it and understanding it and on the off
chance that does turn out to be something extraordinary I mean we need to know what is occurring here uh
additionally here’s another shot publicly available from the NASA
archives you’ve seen some imagery of the triangular UAVs in the past
what’s that debris satellites that’s from the moon right
that’s Apollo 17 we had that picture images from Apollo 17 a few of us saw
something like that uh last Friday yeah extraordinary sad clingons what is it i
don’t know who do you know congressman you know what that is why are we not
investigating this and what I would ask of our brave members of Congress who are here is again with relatively little
effort and money we should be leveraging AI and ML to go into the NASA archives
so much of this has been digitized more every day and conduct a review of what’s
publicly available at UA we spend so much time here and justifiably so
talking about classified material what’s being hidden yet there is a treasure trove of data that if not a smoking gun
certainly is fascinating and worth looking at and applying the scientific method to and these images that you’re
seeing here and here’s more of another UAP from Apollo more of potentially a
Stonehenge strange structures on the moon lunar anomalies that look like
Buddhist temples i’m not saying necessarily all of these have extraordinary explanations maybe some of
them don’t maybe some of them do but it certainly is worth the effort to
investigate and we’re not doing that right now why because of the stigma this
pernicious stigma that prevents us from tackling it and sir that’s where we’re going to need your help that I have many
friends at NASA that are interested in this topic fascinated by it want to delve into it but they need top cover
and that’s why I’d be so grateful to be offline talk more about what we can do with your UNAS administrator coming in
and this isn’t going to cost a lot of money you know this could be done with very little time very little effort yet
the results could be extraordinary finally as we get back to technology I
just wanted to level set relative to what it takes to travel in space three days to the moon 7 to 10 months to Mars
i can tell you exposure to radiation during that trip quite dangerous and challenging
77,000 years to pox in the centator our closest star i mean that’s worse than my
flight since you rough and then 1.7 million years to
get to where we’ve seen some bio signatures for the first time if we’re truly going to explore space we’re going
to need some innovative technology and here we already spent some time discussing the Alcub warp tribe this was
a Mexican physicist who did the initial work proving that within demonstrated
science and I would defer to Eric Davis here but but this is not extraordinary science that a warp drive could exist
the challenge with Altar’s warp drive is that it would require roughly the mass
of Jupiter converted into energy to operate i mean I had a Chevy Suburban
and that was not fuel efficient this would be even more difficult but a
scientist at NASA what was then NASA’s Eagle Works tweaked basically the architecture of the Liberia war drive
and perhaps found some ways to get that down to more the mass of the VW you know
something that we could work with so these are the kinds of technologies that if there is a gravitic system or some
kind of extraordinary technology we must have it in order to traverse those distances and have America and our
international partners lead in space exploration additionally energy i mean
if we are sitting on extraordinary technology zero point energy the castmir effect as we discussed think of the good
we could do in terms of saving the environment improving the economy
creating a post scarcity society it would be extraordinary it would be wonderful and let me just end by saying
the reverse of that is we do not want to fall behind China relative to leveraging
extraordinary technology i don’t know if there’s alien tech out there there may be there might not be but can we risk
falling behind the Chinese and reverse engineering if there is such technology
and this is again where the stigma is so pernicious that I’m sure China has its
top officials working on this 247 coordinated whereas US separated
it’s compartmentalized MIT working on it is tech working on it no we cannot risk
losing communist China because we can’t take this issue seriously we must not
let a lack of vision turn into a lack of freedom thank you
all right well thank you for the uh brief presentation folks um again time is of the essence so I’m going to make
these uh as succinct as possible is it okay if I present as well yeah absolutely i’d love you to present i was
ask questions actually about that so please have the floor uh well I just wanted to say I really appreciate Mike
all the work you’ve done in microgravity and and certainly for you know any of these craft that are you know that are
in space above the Montgomery they have that access to microgravity should they choose to use it uh at our firm American
Deep Tech we’re very focused on a number of areas of deep technology including space tech energy and advanced bio
including one of our co-founders Cat with Despera they they believe they’ve identified a cancer kill switch and I
know you work together we’re talking with her yeah cancer kill switch in microgravity so just you know for
pharmaceuticals that access to microgravity you see the aging within 9
days it would take a year terrestrially for a tumor so that ability to speed up
that iteration on drug development is very important so we’ve got some some really interesting people that we work
with a CTO coming out of NASA a branch chief um coming out of Space for some
very high growth entrepreneurs we also work uh with some leaders you know as our adviserss and venture partners in
the UAP space because we see the keys you know of these areas of technology to
drive that abundance that competitive advantage you know and just societal benefit so people like we’re you know
we’re fortunate to have as our adviser Hal Kuto uh and also to work with people
like uh Julia Mossbridge and Ryan Graves and Diane Finen so I I know that they
are active in so many areas of technology uh but also in UIP and so how
did we come in my former roles which which I thank you so much for that kind introduction which I I’ve completed my
roles in the US government where I was the co-chair alongside NASA of the US space economy inter agency working group
we work with exceptional innovation forward UAP forward and open leaders
across the inter agency And those meetings are public they’re available online us space disruptors day and that
was a day of about um you know 10 sometimes 12 hours of presentations on
in space biotechnology in space semiconductors US launch uh also UAP
also advanced consciousness AI communications and satellites so there
was uh actually inter agency leadership on that ho co-hosted this UAP leading
content from NASA Space Force
DOE DHS Air Force these were all very senior people um NSF and SBA so while I would
say um that in years past before this great movement towards transparency and gratitude for those in the room who have
really led that um you know since the 2017 time frame and before time has
changed and innovation is not about unfortunately because we we want
everybody to come along you know we we appreciate you know it’s great once you get beyond 50% innovation and science
are not about consensus this isn’t we don’t wait to get to 51% this is the the the leaders are are
doing this the fast followers are also doing this and the the reasons why
they’re doing this is because they’re sitting in rooms groups of people we had an extended electronamics group of uh
leaders from across the inter agency and also the private sector and they were
working on advanced energy they were working on advanced communications they
there are funded entrepreneurs uh at well at NSF public awards we funded and I funded companies working on
what the entrepreneurs later described as UAP adjacent or UAP inspired
technologies uh one of those actually multiple of those people have spoken having worked
on um programs that they can’t go into great depth about but certainly others are undertaking that private sector
research where it’s not about it being classified first and this um but the
point on how do you how do you get your communications uh back and forth to Mars
you know without dealing with the 40minut latency how do you do that and what are what are the approaches for
breaking those barriers how do you achieve this energy abundance and and
that more efficient launch capability so it was these conversations on what could
be achieved and what’s already been in some cases declassified in terms of uh work and outcomes or was never
classified really led to conversations where we invited in experts who then said do you want my my extended
electronamics uh presentation or you want my UAP presentation we said you know we’d like
both of those and so that what that led to was receiving that tremendous
presentation uh from Hal from Charles Chase and from others and saying
actually uh can can you give this to more people and so they gave that those types of
presentations um to hundreds of people and what we found with those entrepreneurs was this was the highest
level of engagement we ever got in any field of science or technology and I’m seeing people in the audience who are
part of it shaking their heads yes so the entrepreneurs were so eager and
scientists to engage in the UAP um science and technology and as a frame of
reference when we talk about disruptive technology I’ve worked with a few of them because I’ve had the opportunity to
fund around 400 companies to work with thousands of entrepreneurs those companies from just a quarter billion a
quarter billion plus put out have gone on to raise 8.5 billion in follow on financing and 17.5 billion in total
market cap just in the early years that’s coming out of a place that the program which is not the UAP program but
a program that has catalyzed well over $350 billion you know from well less
than 20 probably 12 billion put out over several decades so these entrepreneurs
oftentimes these highest growth ones regardless of what they’re working in it
can be batteries they’re told never going to work i mean we all have batteries right people will say a higher
performing battery here’s why it’s not going to work so these entrepreneurs are used to being told no and why not and
they still build things and what’s happening today not just in America but around the world because the first time
I saw these experiences was overseas is people are seeing ultra advanced craft
that are higher performing and for people that are building the highest performing craft and the highest
performing energy they are not trying to unsee what they have seen you know and
that they caught on a a wide wide range of sensors there’s the classified
sensors and then there’s the sensors like this we have imagery you know on our phones um from going out and and
seeing things so I think that the um the impetus to build things is what’s
driving this and what would be the right levels to really go after this you know
this is something that a few of us have spoken about but uh my background is also as a strategist so we we do a lot
of strategy math and uh I used to be at BCG and the question of if you’re
building the highest performing systems what type of resources would you put in
place so if we look at you know we and I’m I’m sharing kind of casually Google
numbers so you can we can get to better definition but how much money went into
the ISS our long-term inspace laboratory some of the numbers online say that it
was well over 70 billion for the US part of that and that with other nations
contributions it might be 150 billion what was the cost of the Apollo program
that was 26 billion you know uh you know from the 60s to the 70s uh some
estimates put that at inflation adjusted well well over 200 perhaps $250 billion
dollars so if you were to ask me today what is the right amount of money to be
investing in these ultra high performing technologies these Manhattan style
projects it’s well into the hundreds of billions of dollars that’s the right answer today whether the US makes that
investment or whether somebody else does we are talking about advantage for
multi- trillion dollar markets so some would say perhaps we made the right
investments over time that we’ve invested those tens of billions or those hundreds of billions and if we have how
do we celebrate the accomplishments that might have come out of those programs how do we give the recognition to those
scientists those people who have served who perhaps have not been able to speak about their work how do we derive value
from that how do we say these pieces that might have been constrained because you didn’t have access to the tools
everybody else has access to on the outside and the collaboration how can we bring the pieces in in a way that is
respectful to national security and increases resilience and and abundance
and I I am concerned i mean I I appreciate I think many of us want
transparency but also how do we make that so the people who may have worked in this want to come forward you know so
if we’re offering them oh you built something you’re given resources and here’s some punishment that that’s going
to be hard to get the technology out how you know and there’s lots of ways that that could be brought fully forth it
could be anonymized into a centralized clearing house if there is valuable technology there that can help people in
the United States and around the world let’s celebrate what’s been built and let’s build the gaps that are there so
we see tremendous opportunity um the race is on some would say those are
exceptionally uh large programs uh many of us have seen these this wide range of
phenomena be they craft be they orbs these the reason it matters so sometimes
the first time you see this phenomena it’s a point of interest and you say wow
you know I kind of thought there was life off planet whether it’s life off planet or advanced terrestrial technology but you think well okay
interesting now back to our dayto-day what do we do with this and so a number of us came to because our core roles
were advanced energy advanced computation advanced biology the answer was people who are working in their core
fields of biotechnology technology quantum that they’re seeing some of the
potential path forward through this UAP and GSM technology can we classify it
today i don’t know how i mean there are parts that we can say stay away from
this due to this risk but the challenge on some of this is if if you’re to say we’ll classify UAP technology you just
got to stop working on it for people that are familiar with the science and the technology there are elements of
this that are relevant to quantum and quantum entanglement so what does that mean for our national posture on quantum
ai is interwoven with this you talk about microgravity and advanced materials so do we just not do certain
layering or advancement of certain materials because they’ve been found in the crash retrieval we’re not able to
walk back because this is so interwoven so saying that UAP is off limits that’s
like saying let’s go home let’s you know maybe can we still use fire you know maybe maybe you know let’s look into it
you know can you still use rocks so many of the fields of technology would be off
limits so honestly we don’t know how to to you know this idea we don’t once you’re in that you don’t even know it’s
like saying stop using math so the entrepreneurs are getting inspired they’re seeing things and and so this is
kind of humorous to scientists so we both appreciate that people are talking about crash retrievals and reverse
engineering are there crash retrievals well are there crashes i mean there’s deer retrievals where I live i mean a
crash seems a lot more interesting than a deer to pick up and uh anybody who
knows an engineer says the first time you see anything of interest you’re certainly going to reverse engineer it
so whether that happens inside government programs or whether it happens out in the streets Americans and
people around the world are seeing this phenomena and uh those that build things are saying you know what do we build
together so we we’ve seen these on a number of occasions we’ve brought some high ranking uh scientists down to folks
who are able in in spots where these show up more frequently and uh it’s
worth noting that there are people a number of groups of people who are currently pulling in or attracting craft
you know and other phenomena and some some people just happen to see them i’m looking right at you Ryan you saw a lot
of these but um so there are people that have seen these infrequently there are people who have seen these on a
dayto-day basis when we’ve spoken with scientists you know over the past year or two and so this is this is coming out
of places that some would see as the scientific establishment and can can we talk about this can we not you know and
some of these conversations hadn’t taken place as openly when they did what we found was when we go into rooms and we
talk with people who are innovators they’re usually it’s usually 30 to 50%
of people will share that they’ve seen or experienced anomalous phenomenon you
know sometimes they say “Oh no I haven’t seen a UAP.” And then they say “Well you know I did this orb over a football
field and you know it was huge and then so people have seen things and we’ve had to have the conversation with leaders in
science where we said by the way times have changed there’s all this great work that’s been done towards disclosure and
when we started talking to people about it where we might have thought it was one in 20 or one in a 100 seems like
it’s more like one in three or two and three or maybe three and three and three three people aren’t talking about it and
um so that We’ve had the conversation which is it is not credible or viable to
act like this isn’t going on so it’s it’s a little we use the analogy that it’s a little bit like whale watching
it’s both normal to if you live by the coast only certainly but if you live by the coast you have access to get out of
the water you know there’s a percentage of people who would have seen whales there’s a percentage who haven’t it’s
normal both ways so nothing to feel like you know special or not special you know regardless but it’s ubiquitous so if you
can’t go in front of a room of people you know if you’ve seen that and it’s
cred and if you haven’t seen it say listen people are saying this they know so to be credible you you do need to
acknowledge it’s out there there’s so much data there’s so much people have on their iPhones you know there’s so many
people who will speak to the programs on the high side they’re in but the low side you know is not waiting for
agreement they’re not the fortune one the US government can lead this we can
try to figure out what benefit we have from the great work people in this country and perhaps around the world have done or people are ready to move
forward and uh when I was in government I used to receive proposals and without
going into the details in any of them you know in various fields of technology where people think they’re the only ones
no any idea you have believe me dozens of people are working at the same time so this is something that right now both
in this country around the world there are so many people that are eager to build this and a number of them are
already building these things up so just because you don’t see it doesn’t mean that it isn’t happening all over the
place both in this country and abroad so if we need to lead if we want to lead we need to be active so I’m I’m looking we
always listen with respect to innovators and entrepreneurs and I want to thank so many of you for sharing what you’ve seen
uh there is an opportunity i I I expect more scientists are going to be engaging directly with the phenomena and as
scientists they’re going to be doing experiments and and methods okay so you want to talk about something that people
talk even less about than UAPs so the the thing that was even more of a
third rail than UAPs is the sources and methods for some of this so as you’re hearing about there’s a number of teams
that are working calm this phenomena and they’re talking about all these different things some of them have these okay ultra exotic protocols and then one
of the one of the groups that we went to visit with some scientists their
protocol was prayer and it was not some exotic thing was the our father the Hail
Mary you know conversation and I’m not trying to constrain it to any any denomination or any faith or lack
thereof because I I think one of the hesitencies people have is they don’t they want this to be for everybody and
not um not to be specific or linked with one thing but sources and methods when we’re talking science there are people
through meditation or very you know dayby-day prayer are calling in these
craft you know and these orbs so uh it’s science let’s talk about what it is and then assess it
so my first question actually is to you Anna um so there was a recent statement
by a government official and it kind of went unnoticed i think it was a few weeks ago where they said “We are now
manipulating space time we have the ability to manipulate space time.” So I’ll let that sink in for a moment that
was an official statement by a US government representative you can
elaborate on that well there’s certainly been uh publicly visible funding that has gone into that and um I’ll say a
couple things before I would say there’s a a much better expert in the audience uh Dr julia Mossbridge in terms of um
space-time work um also that’s something that Dr hal Puto with spacetime metric engineering has been very active in um
so so there’s been plenty of work on that and um there there’s a lot that’s
going on so the backdrop of that the National Science Foundation has been a fundamental Oh and sorry just one quick
thing to say but by the way um we we also a few of us were also maybe several
of us in the room about over a year ago were on uh the National Mall at the
National Academy of Sciences where it was National Space Week and there were some uh presenters from around the world
and that also included a representative uh from the the Chinese government
presumably the CCK and the presentation that they were putting up included
request quest for we want to work with people on I believe it was space-time metric engineering uh it was
gravitational control and it was also alien life on the planet amongst other
things like renewables so the Chinese are literally coming down to the
National Mall and saying hi come talk to us about this you know and
so come on seriously another thing that they said by the way you know in terms
of many of us have been advocating for much higher levels of capital to go into
innovation and also into inspace infrastructure which does not have access to the terrestrial financial
tools like debt you know so if you buy a house Most people they’re making a smaller down payment 20% 5% whatever
they could do more of a minimum in space it’s typically you’ve got to front all of the money up front can you if you’re
not going to build a hospital for the individual patient you need to have the financial model so anyways when I was
trying to figure out what was the space budget for China they wouldn’t tell me but um the the gentleman did look at me
in disdain and know he’s talking to all of you he said when we look at putting up a space
We view that as that cost the same amount of money as putting down a couple of kilometers of metro basically we’re
going to do that all day every day so if we can’t figure out how to make the investments to win in
these transformational markets for abundance for societal benefits and for
economic growth and gain uh we’re going to be left behind so this is a So the people that are moving forward are
moving forward we really hope that the u the US government fortune one um you
know is able to share some of the great work that’s been done you know previously across all these fields but
the private sector is moving forward folks we’re going to have time for only two very quick questions we’re
already way over our time and we have to unfortunately surrender this room back over to folks so let me finish i’ve got
two here and then afterwards you want to get with our guests you can um we’re not going to have time to open it up right now for for public questions i have uh
let me get to this real quick and if we could our guests could please keep um the answer as succinct as possible
before we actually get to other room um let me start with with with you Anna
um the National Science Foundation has been a fundamental pillar of some of America’s revolutionary technology and
concepts for many decades how can the NSF help the government now concerning
the topic of UAVs well I guess one of the things that’s just publicly visible is that we have
been uh when I was formerly at NSF uh I would just say that there’s lots of publicly visible content of us being
very um forward on the topic listening to innovators working with strong
colleagues from across the inter agency so I I think that um NSF has shown and
NSF leadership has also just been extremely supportive so I just want to be very clear i left the government I’m
excited about building things in the private sector and I only ever received the greatest support and collaboration
from my inter agency colleagues and from the agencies with which I worked who are extremely forward on all areas of
innovation but certainly UAP fits within that including our publicly visible awards that were made to uh fund UAP
science there’s plenty there’s great people that are highly supportive you know particularly over there excellent
very encouraging thank you Mike um last question you were on the NASA UAP
independent study team my question for you is what were the recommendations of the NASA UAP independent study team and
how those recommendations how should those recommendations be implemented for the
purpose of time thank you for that question i’ll focus on two of those recommendations we already discussed
going through the NASA archives with an AI ML system to get the data just a few
examples of which we were able to show today again which could be quite extraordinary mechanically I think there
are companies that would even volunteer to do that work for NASA but the second one and I really appreciate you showing
that photo which was taken by a commercial pilot and one of the great disappointments I had when I was on the
UAP defense study team was I was asking the FAA “How many reports have you gotten from commercial vitals are those
reports being archived how are we keeping track of that?” And I got confusion confusion and no straight
answers and here I’d like to give credit to Brian Gray again uh for suggesting
that we leverage NASA’s aviation safety recruiting system ASRS which has been
operating for decades has hundreds of thousands of cases and this is a confidential system where pilots crew
can call in about safety anomalies that they’ve experienced it’s worked phenomenally well we should be
leveraging this system for the reporting of EUP it could be done quickly it could
be done efficiently and the amount of data that we will receive would be
amazing additionally the images that I showed you was from Google the commercially implent services program
public private partnerships have driven all of this i’m so excited for the democratization of space and the data
that we will get from that this was just one example today as SpaceX Blue Origin
Redwire other companies move forward all with their own cameras all with our own systems we’re going to get a lot more
data but NASA still holds on to a lot of it so for example with what I presented
we need the raw data we need timestamps we need data in a format where we can do
true academic research so if we were just to do those two things and again we
can do support from Congress i think to push that uh I think NASA will play a tremendously important role and
particularly the aviation community and the commercial space community the amount of data we get I think will
completely shift the level of sophistication on this topic and and I think there’s also um probably about 20
or 30 hours of some of that um forward inter agency content um in space
disruptors day and the ecosic futures podcast which we have Diane in the room here today so thank you Diane for
helping get that information out broadly i do have to say though I’m a little less optimistic than Anna relative to
the adoption in government as I said during my testimony that particularly academic members of the Nancy UAP
independent study team were threatened outright threatened not for saying UAP
are real but for just having the timmerity of even reviewing the topic
you can’t do science in that environment and part of the reason that I’m calling for Congress to help is there’s still a
great deal of skepticism even just at NASA and careers that get ended just for having again the tearity research for it
so I think it’s incumbent of all of us to push for real signs objective science
overcome that stigma let’s get to the data because our economy and our national security may be depending on it
and I think you contributed so much so what I would say is some of the things that you experienced you know or that
Lou you know and Chris and others experience there’s that body of having been able to point to those leaders so
we had the advantage of being able to point to your study you know and to this prior work so um you know and again I I
think there’s the opportunity for the government but I would say that it’s it’s not there are industries that move
forward that are not um forwarded by the government but I I think just to be
something very important that came out because sometimes if we say oh UAP this UAP that um there’s going to be some
great technologies that come out of that that is very fluffy you know and who cares so I think um something that I got
briefed on in an unclassified just informal no classification level
environment and both in in personal capacity but then I later brought that
person in to brief others in the agency is there a real and meaningful
technologies that have come from these programs and I think with a lot of this information you’re going to see that you
know the story about it has been in the internet for decades perhaps so what I
have though on uh from a very credible source was that yes there are people who
say that this came out of the UAP programs when we talk about lasers and
semiconductors and that was so important you know semiconductors the top 10
companies today a $6.5 trillion industry that we all
benefit from and underpins our global economy that is something that it’s not
just oh maybe we’ll get something it’s that there are tremendous people who have built things you know both in
classified and unclassified environments and u that’s been you know put out by so many authors and people in the news but
some are in environments that we can say this is taken seriously and those people have told the government that yes
there’s been real advantage on some of these most important core technologies from coming from crash retrieval and I
think to get the government to take it seriously we need to engage the public we’ve got to get outside the UAP bubble
and Dan Farah did a tremendous movie age disclosure it’s really blue story in many It’s extraordinary himself and Jay
Stratton if we can touch the public if we can get them engaged if we can get them the same information that we just
saw I think that would be completely transformative well let me since time is
up yes and first of all thank you sincerely for your participation it was it was fantastic conversation let me
leave a couple thoughts here if I may before we say a final farewell uh one of the recommendations we made to Congress
is the um generation of a national intelligence strategy that would be promulgated on annual basis just like we
do for other targets um it’s a system that we have perfected already and then right on the heels of that a national
strategy every year annual strategy on UAP and drone basically any unattributed
objects that are in our skies uh we should have a strategy for it because we’re seeing both on the combat field
and even the streets of New York we’re seeing technologies that we we can’t really explain and frankly could be used
against us in a very nefarious way if we don’t get a handle on it um two what I’d like to do is propose
and and hopefully Congress at some point will be open to this that we should do a forum like this every year for the
American public and for the media and allow Congress to get to uh the bottom of things and ask the questions that
they normally wouldn’t be able to ask and bring in the Department of Justice and the intelligence community the
Department of Defense and bring them all here why not right set them down here in front of the American people by the way
I look at it you’re paying their their their paychecks anyways right they kind of owe you some answers and they owe Congress some answers um I would also
say please let your members of Congress know that you support this if you like what Representative Burles and
Representative Luna and Rashett and others have done here today let them know right they need to hear this and so
other members of Congress can see this and say “Hey that works right tell them
that they need to hear that feedback.” Unless you don’t want one of these again
um but that would be my suggestion last but not least I want to thank specifically our members of Congress um
because at the end of the day they’re your representatives they represent this country they are very much part of this
country and they are the reasons why you are all here today and when you’re here they have facilitated this they have
sponsored this they have gone out of their way to put their political careers potentially in jeopardy for even having
this conversation for you so um if you appreciate
this let us know and last but not least thank you to every one of you again our friends in the media the folks that came
over here some cases uh came from across the world and traveled here very long
distances to be with us here today thank you very much um is very meaningful and
we’re all here because it’s been a group effort so with that said let’s give a round of applause to our guest here and
[Applause]out of this room so without further ado uh this meeting Is that