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[theme music]
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>>DAVID WILCOCK: Welcome
to "Cosmic Disclosure."
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I'm your host, David Wilcock.
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And we are exploring the
fascinating testimony
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of an insider named Corey Goode.
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Thank you for being on our show.
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>>COREY GOODE: Thank you.
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>>DAVID: So when
we last left off,
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we were talking about the ICC,
or Interplanetary Corporate
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Conglomerate, as they're called,
using the industrial power
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of the military and corporate
might of the United States
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post World War II to
create a massive expansion.
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Now, you said that there was
a seed base on the moon that
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was small, that was built by the
Germans, that was then expanded
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quite considerably by the ICC.
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And you also said that there
were many failed attempts
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at bases on Mars, and then
certain bases actually
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stuck and were able
to stick around.
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And then those
also got built out.
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>>GOODE: Correct.
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>>DAVID: OK, so how many of
the seed bases lasted on Mars?
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And where were they?
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>>GOODE: The first couple
of German seed colonies
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that actually made it on
Mars were within the first 20
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degrees of the polar regions.
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There was one in particular
that the ICC used
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to expand and build off of.
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And this one was somewhat
in a canyon area,
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into the side of a
canyon, and advanced in
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and was under the surface
of Mars, not on the surface.
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>>DAVID: And you said that the
some of how they hollowed out
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more space inside the Earth
was with these what I was told
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were called Fifth Gen type
nukes, where they just
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create a big, sudden
explosion with no lingering
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radioactivity?
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>>GOODE: Yes.
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>>DAVID: The one they
became the mainstay,
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was it in the northern
or southern hemisphere?
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>>GOODE: The northern
hemisphere was
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where the first main base
that was a German name,
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in the beginning which
was built, was built out.
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>>DAVID: OK.
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>>GOODE: And it was
built out in a huge way.
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It was built out to contain
a large amount of engineers
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and scientists.
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And also, a little ways
away an industrial complex
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was built where they were
going to start producing
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I guess the items
that they needed,
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technology that they needed,
that came from raw materials
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they mined on Mars, moons,
and in the asteroid belt.
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They took these raw
materials, turned them
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into usable materials,
and even composites,
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and created what they needed
in these rather small plants
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in the beginning.
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>>DAVID: So what was
considered to be the desired
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technology that they
were building out there
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in the beginning?
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What was their initial attempt?
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What did they want to make?
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>>GOODE: They were building what
was needed to expand on Mars.
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>>DAVID: OK.
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>>GOODE: So in the
beginning, they
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were just building what
was needed to expand
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their infrastructure on Mars.
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>>DAVID: So are they
building materials
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on Mars out of local stuff,
like you said before,
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involving the Kevlar bags
and then making concrete out
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of local earth from
the Mars sphere?
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What was the building technique?
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You said that these
industrial facilities they had
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were building the
things they needed.
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>>GOODE: Yes, they
were building--
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the raw materials were coming
from mining that was going on
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on Mars, on various moons,
and the asteroid belt.
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These raw materials were taken
to the Mars' industrial areas
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further away from the
colonies and converted
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into usable materials,
whether they be melted down
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into certain metals that
were put into dyes or forms
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or converted into
composite materials.
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>>DAVID: Well, you're touching
on an interesting thing
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now because you're describing
mining that's not just
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happening on the moon or Mars.
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So we haven't really
gotten into yet the scope
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of-- I would guess
there would have
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to be some kind of facilities
built to mine on these moons
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or asteroids or wherever.
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>>GOODE: Some of these asteroids
are incredibly huge to where
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there are three- to four-man
teams that live there on these
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asteroids and operate--
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>>DAVID: Three or four people?
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>>GOODE: Three or four people.
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And they operate these
mining facilities.
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A lot of it's done
robotically and remotely
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through remote machines.
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The raw materials are then
put into these large freighter
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craft and then flown back to
the planet Mars to the facility
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that it needs to go to.
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And then the raw
materials are taken out
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of these freighter
craft and then converted
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into the materials
that are needed.
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>>DAVID: You said in
a previous episode
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that the Germans had
discovered, through
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extraterrestrial assistance,
these spherical, natural
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portals they could
use to teleport
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even something as big
as a battleship to Mars
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or elsewhere.
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Are there such natural
portals available to them
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on these asteroids
or on the moons?
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Or why would they have
to use a shuttle craft,
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is really what I'm saying.
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>>GOODE: It's just
more practical for them
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to transport these materials
in these large freighter craft
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to and from the asteroid
belt and this moons
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to these locations.
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>>DAVID: If we saw one
of these freighter craft,
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what would it look like?
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>>GOODE: It's almost like
a super large shipping
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container with small
little wings on each side
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that just barely jet out.
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The wings don't look
like they're large enough
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to use the Bernoulli
principle to give them
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flight in an atmosphere,
but there's wings on them
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nevertheless, real small.
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And the front has
about a 45-degree angle
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where the cockpit is.
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And the back part is basically
like a big-rig or a shipping
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container.
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That part is detachable.
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But I've never seen it detached.
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I've only seen them attached
and coming and going.
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>>DAVID: You said that
the original German craft
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were using this mercury
propulsion system, rotating
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mercury.
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What is the power source for
a craft like these shipping
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containers?
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Are they still using the
mercury at this point?
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Or have they gotten in a more
advanced propulsion system?
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>>GOODE: They're using more
advanced propulsion systems,
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and there's different types
of propulsion systems.
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There are the torsion
systems, which lot of people
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call warp drives.
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>>DAVID: People in the program
actually say it's a warp drive?
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Or you're just
saying lay persons?
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>>GOODE: We would
consider it warp drive.
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It creates a torsion field.
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You have like the engine
here, and on either side,
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you have a torsion coming
from the center of the device
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on out.
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>>DAVID: The field?
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>>GOODE: The field,
the torsion field.
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And then they control
how much energy
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is going into the torsion,
the field on either side.
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And it causes the
space time to twist,
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causing it to be
pulled in one direction
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or pulled in another
direction because of basically
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like the warp drive that
they've depicted on Star Trek.
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And there are--
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>>DAVID: So it's
almost like it's
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creating a hill in space
time that it's falling
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into as it goes forward.
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>>GOODE: Right.
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And there are
temporal jump drives
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that are extremely advanced.
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They had to place buffers
on these temporal drives
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so people weren't jumping
back and forth in space
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time in our local area.
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>>DAVID: Meaning time travel.
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>>GOODE: Right.
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And it works almost
like teleportation.
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It's instantaneous.
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>>DAVID: So what was your
understanding of time
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as it was presented to you?
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Did they explain
the discrepancies
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between the physics
of time, like Einstein
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saying it's one-dimensional,
and it only moves forward?
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>>GOODE: Yeah.
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Basically they showed one
of Einstein's equations--
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he had things close.
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He just needed to flip
one equation over here.
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His later things that were
suppressed, he had even closer.
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But the physics that are being
pushed on us are archaic.
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If we compare it
to medical terms,
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it's like if you have a
fever, let's cut you and let
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you do bloodletting.
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It's that far backwards
in the way of thinking.
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>>DAVID: All right, let's stick
with the drives for a minute.
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So you have the space time,
like the squeezing the pumpkin
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seed out your fingers
kind of thing,
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where it's falling into
the hole that it creates.
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>>GOODE: Yeah, the torsion.
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>>DAVID: Torsion drive.
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Then you have this
temporal drive,
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where you could
actually travel in time,
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but you say they
put buffers on it.
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And why did they
need the buffers?
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>>GOODE: Well, to prevent
people from doing it on purpose,
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and also there are accidents.
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They actually had developed
a communication device,
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and it was actually based on
something that you mentioned
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earlier, quantum entanglement.
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>>DAVID: Right.
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>>GOODE: And each
of these devices,
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they would take an isotope that
they were quantum entangled.
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>>DAVID: Right.
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>>GOODE: And these devices,
you would speak in one,
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and they also had video.
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And there was no signal
being sent between them.
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They were completely
secure and unhackable.
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>>DAVID: Right.
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>>GOODE: And they called
them quantum correlating
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communication devices.
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And these were in vessels.
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And if a person had
a bad jump and ended
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up somewhere or some
time they shouldn't be,
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the two isotopes would
be out of harmony,
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I think they called it, for a
certain amount of nanoseconds.
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And they were able to
calculate when and where
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the person or the
other device was
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by calculating how long it took
the vibrations to come back
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into harmony.
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>>DAVID: So could you talk to
somebody in a different time
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by quantum entanglement?
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>>GOODE: Mm-hmm.
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>>DAVID: Really?
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Wow.
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>>GOODE: Anything that's
quantum entangled, no matter
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how far you separate them
in dimension, reality, time,
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space, they stay entangled.
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>>DAVID: And by like the
Doppler effect, the lag time,
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you can calculate space
and time coordinates
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of where that person
ended up falling into?
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>>GOODE: Exactly.
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>>DAVID: Did you
experience time paradoxes,
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like that kind of thing?
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Is that part of why they don't
want people jumping back?
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Can they mess with
our timeline somehow?
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>>GOODE: There were
a lot of experiments
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of people going back in
time and doing experiments.
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And they were saying,
oh, we've created
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all these divergent timelines.
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And then they were sending teams
going back trying to fix them
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and making things worse
and worse and worse.
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00:15:08,375 --> 00:15:13,580
And finally, they realized
that time is like space.
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It's elastic.
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And all these paradoxes
all collapse and go back
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into a singularity.
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And that our consciousness
controls these timelines,
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00:15:31,965 --> 00:15:36,069
has an effect on these
timelines as well
249
00:15:36,169 --> 00:15:38,771
and which timeline
we're going to be--
250
00:15:38,871 --> 00:15:45,345
we choose which timeline we're
going to be in consciously.
251
00:15:45,445 --> 00:15:46,980
>>DAVID: Let's just
get back to what
252
00:15:47,080 --> 00:15:49,116
we're trying to cover in
this episode for now, which
253
00:15:49,216 --> 00:15:54,421
is some of the people are
traveling in temporal drives,
254
00:15:54,521 --> 00:15:58,458
and there's build-outs of
colonies in our solar system.
255
00:15:58,558 --> 00:16:01,961
So if we look at
the history, you've
256
00:16:02,062 --> 00:16:04,797
got the moon first, then Mars.
257
00:16:04,897 --> 00:16:08,668
How soon after they got to Mars
and they got successful, stable
258
00:16:08,768 --> 00:16:11,938
encampments did they
start building facilities
259
00:16:12,039 --> 00:16:15,675
on asteroids or other moons?
260
00:16:15,775 --> 00:16:17,310
>>GOODE: Almost immediately.
261
00:16:17,410 --> 00:16:18,478
>>DAVID: Really?
262
00:16:18,578 --> 00:16:20,147
>>GOODE: Yeah, the Germans
had already started
263
00:16:20,247 --> 00:16:23,283
mining certain asteroids.
264
00:16:23,383 --> 00:16:28,221
And this is one of the reasons
the ICC wanted to go out there.
265
00:16:28,321 --> 00:16:30,190
They heard there were
asteroids out there
266
00:16:30,290 --> 00:16:34,361
that had platinum and gold.
267
00:16:34,461 --> 00:16:38,098
And the talk down here
on Earth about there
268
00:16:38,198 --> 00:16:45,038
being a discrepancy in
gold, gold being rare,
269
00:16:45,138 --> 00:16:50,177
silver being rare, that
is a total manipulation.
270
00:16:50,277 --> 00:16:53,980
I mean, just on
Earth the syndicates
271
00:16:54,081 --> 00:16:55,648
have hidden a bunch of gold.
272
00:16:55,748 --> 00:16:56,683
>>DAVID: Right.
273
00:16:56,783 --> 00:16:58,718
>>GOODE: There's tons of gold.
274
00:16:58,818 --> 00:17:00,987
And the gold that
they're finding
275
00:17:01,088 --> 00:17:05,558
in these asteroid
belts, atomically you
276
00:17:05,658 --> 00:17:10,297
look at Earth gold and this
gold, they're the same.
277
00:17:12,632 --> 00:17:16,069
They don't have a different
atomic structures.
278
00:17:16,169 --> 00:17:19,005
It's gold.
279
00:17:19,106 --> 00:17:24,311
So there is plenty of
gold in the solar system
280
00:17:24,411 --> 00:17:30,049
and so many tons of gold
and platinum and silver
281
00:17:30,150 --> 00:17:33,620
and other elements
in the asteroid belt.
282
00:17:33,720 --> 00:17:36,256
>>DAVID: Could you actually
find entire asteroids
283
00:17:36,356 --> 00:17:39,392
that are just like a piece
of gold or a piece of silver?
284
00:17:39,492 --> 00:17:41,594
>>GOODE: Well, I wouldn't
say that they're entirely
285
00:17:41,694 --> 00:17:48,335
a big nugget of gold
but are very much gold.
286
00:17:48,435 --> 00:17:52,004
It doesn't take a
whole lot of refining
287
00:17:52,105 --> 00:17:57,210
to separate the gold
from the bedrock,
288
00:17:57,310 --> 00:17:59,179
or what used to be
bedrock, that it's in.
289
00:17:59,279 --> 00:18:01,013
>>DAVID: Well, I would
think if they wanted
290
00:18:01,114 --> 00:18:03,383
to wrangle an
asteroid like that,
291
00:18:03,483 --> 00:18:05,017
you'd need a pretty big craft.
292
00:18:05,118 --> 00:18:08,988
So what were the
original sizes of craft
293
00:18:09,088 --> 00:18:10,357
that the Germans
were using as they
294
00:18:10,457 --> 00:18:11,891
made this expansion outward?
295
00:18:11,991 --> 00:18:13,693
>>GOODE: Small.
296
00:18:13,793 --> 00:18:18,798
They were flying to these
large-- I mean, picture
297
00:18:18,898 --> 00:18:25,071
this huge asteroid and
these little bitty craft.
298
00:18:25,172 --> 00:18:28,808
They're landing on
these asteroids,
299
00:18:28,908 --> 00:18:34,547
and then they're setting up
mining facilities and slowly
300
00:18:34,647 --> 00:18:37,350
digging further and
further and further
301
00:18:37,450 --> 00:18:41,654
and further in to
these asteroids
302
00:18:41,754 --> 00:18:45,258
to where they're getting
more and more hollowed out.
303
00:18:45,358 --> 00:18:49,329
Well, these asteroids
are constantly
304
00:18:49,429 --> 00:18:52,599
being hit by smaller asteroids
and this kind of thing.
305
00:18:52,699 --> 00:18:57,337
Well, you have safer
working conditions inside.
306
00:18:57,437 --> 00:19:02,675
So most of what's going on is
further inside the asteroid.
307
00:19:02,775 --> 00:19:08,715
And once they had gathered a
certain amount of raw material,
308
00:19:08,815 --> 00:19:13,353
whether it be gold or platinum
or any of these other things,
309
00:19:13,453 --> 00:19:18,391
it would be put it into
these large container craft
310
00:19:18,491 --> 00:19:21,394
and then flown to
its destination
311
00:19:21,494 --> 00:19:25,765
to be changed into
usable materials.
312
00:19:25,865 --> 00:19:28,167
>>DAVID: When I was
talking to Pete Peterson,
313
00:19:28,268 --> 00:19:30,870
he described the really
interesting properties
314
00:19:30,970 --> 00:19:32,639
of a metal called bismuth.
315
00:19:32,739 --> 00:19:35,808
And he said that you could
extract it into a very, very
316
00:19:35,908 --> 00:19:39,312
long wire and then make
a coil with bismuth
317
00:19:39,412 --> 00:19:40,780
and run electrical
current through it,
318
00:19:40,880 --> 00:19:43,450
and you get all kinds of
weird stuff start to happen.
319
00:19:43,550 --> 00:19:45,084
>>GOODE: Yeah, I
believe that that is
320
00:19:45,184 --> 00:19:47,954
what is used in the Gauss guns.
321
00:19:48,054 --> 00:19:49,556
>>DAVID: What's
Gauss-- Gausskin?
322
00:19:49,656 --> 00:19:54,193
>>GOODE: Guns, the weapons that
are basically like rail guns.
323
00:19:54,294 --> 00:19:55,528
>>DAVID: Oh.
324
00:19:55,628 --> 00:19:57,230
>>GOODE: When they took
them apart to show me,
325
00:19:57,330 --> 00:20:01,734
they had rods running
down the barrel
326
00:20:01,834 --> 00:20:03,903
and then this thin
wire-- they called it
327
00:20:04,003 --> 00:20:09,442
the coil-- that ran along
the outside that basically
328
00:20:09,542 --> 00:20:10,510
worked like a rail gun.
329
00:20:10,610 --> 00:20:14,381
An electromagnetic field pulsed.
330
00:20:14,481 --> 00:20:18,551
And also an electromagnetic
field pulsed down the rod
331
00:20:18,651 --> 00:20:24,457
and sent a projectile out
at like-- I can't remember.
332
00:20:24,557 --> 00:20:26,826
It seemed like 5,000 miles
an hour or something.
333
00:20:26,926 --> 00:20:29,496
It was like an incredible speed.
334
00:20:29,596 --> 00:20:34,567
And the projectiles were
just under like 50 cal.
335
00:20:34,667 --> 00:20:35,535
>>DAVID: Wow.
336
00:20:35,635 --> 00:20:39,272
>>GOODE: And at
the bottom they had
337
00:20:39,372 --> 00:20:41,841
basically a grenade launcher.
338
00:20:41,941 --> 00:20:47,680
And these grenades were like
20-gauge shotgun shells,
339
00:20:47,780 --> 00:20:50,483
just in size and
shape-- they didn't
340
00:20:50,583 --> 00:20:53,486
look like shotgun shells--
that were launched
341
00:20:53,586 --> 00:20:58,658
in a similar manner that had
a very advanced plastique type
342
00:20:58,758 --> 00:21:03,596
explosive in them that
gave a much larger report
343
00:21:03,696 --> 00:21:08,034
or explosion than like
an M203 grenade launcher.
344
00:21:08,134 --> 00:21:10,970
And these were the rifles
that the security details
345
00:21:11,070 --> 00:21:12,639
would carry.
346
00:21:12,739 --> 00:21:15,508
>>DAVID: Did the
ICC or the Germans
347
00:21:15,608 --> 00:21:18,378
develop advanced
computer technology
348
00:21:18,478 --> 00:21:19,946
faster than we did
on Earth that they
349
00:21:20,046 --> 00:21:23,082
could start to use in all this
robotic mining and things?
350
00:21:23,182 --> 00:21:24,684
>>GOODE: Yes.
351
00:21:24,784 --> 00:21:30,557
They've had computers, computer
systems, and quantum computers
352
00:21:30,657 --> 00:21:37,464
much, much longer than-- way
before Bill Gates and IBM
353
00:21:37,564 --> 00:21:44,303
started to put out motherboards
and integrated chips.
354
00:21:44,404 --> 00:21:45,638
>>DAVID: So can
you just spell out
355
00:21:45,738 --> 00:21:48,708
for us now-- when
the Germans first got
356
00:21:48,808 --> 00:21:52,545
started, what was the
approximate year that they
357
00:21:52,645 --> 00:21:55,982
first got a stable
encampment on the moon?
358
00:21:56,082 --> 00:21:57,417
Do you know exactly?
359
00:21:57,517 --> 00:22:02,455
>>GOODE: I know that
it was in the late '30s
360
00:22:02,555 --> 00:22:06,859
that they were using an
older facility that they
361
00:22:06,959 --> 00:22:11,030
had pressurized and were
using while they were
362
00:22:11,130 --> 00:22:14,033
building another smaller base.
363
00:22:14,133 --> 00:22:16,703
>>DAVID: This was like Ancient
Builder race type of ruin
364
00:22:16,803 --> 00:22:17,269
that they found?
365
00:22:17,370 --> 00:22:18,004
>>GOODE: Right
366
00:22:18,104 --> 00:22:19,506
>>DAVID: OK.
367
00:22:19,606 --> 00:22:22,809
>>GOODE: And then that was
in the early '40s, I think,
368
00:22:22,909 --> 00:22:26,913
that they completed this
small base of theirs.
369
00:22:27,013 --> 00:22:30,349
>>DAVID: When was
the first stable base
370
00:22:30,450 --> 00:22:32,819
that lasted on Mars?
371
00:22:32,919 --> 00:22:37,757
>>GOODE: I think
around '52 to '54
372
00:22:37,857 --> 00:22:43,129
is when they really
started getting the United
373
00:22:43,229 --> 00:22:47,567
States to sign the agreements,
and they had only just
374
00:22:47,667 --> 00:22:53,005
really got a good
foothold on Mars by then.
375
00:22:53,105 --> 00:22:56,075
They really had a lot
of setbacks on Mars.
376
00:22:56,175 --> 00:22:57,410
They lost a lot of lives.
377
00:22:57,510 --> 00:22:59,912
>>DAVID: So almost like
an 18-year struggle.
378
00:23:00,012 --> 00:23:01,714
>>GOODE: Yeah.
379
00:23:01,814 --> 00:23:05,985
I mean, they really did the
pioneering work on Mars.
380
00:23:06,085 --> 00:23:07,887
>>DAVID: But they had
better success building
381
00:23:07,987 --> 00:23:10,356
mining facilities on
asteroids and moons
382
00:23:10,457 --> 00:23:13,359
prior to stabilizing Mars?
383
00:23:13,460 --> 00:23:14,927
>>GOODE: This was
at the same time.
384
00:23:15,027 --> 00:23:15,495
>>DAVID: Oh.
385
00:23:15,595 --> 00:23:17,029
>>GOODE: Yeah.
386
00:23:17,129 --> 00:23:23,970
Once they had a stable area
to call their own territory,
387
00:23:24,070 --> 00:23:30,743
then they were then starting
their mining operations.
388
00:23:30,843 --> 00:23:34,481
And their mining
operations were more--
389
00:23:34,581 --> 00:23:39,218
I guess when a geologist
goes around a large region
390
00:23:39,318 --> 00:23:44,624
and is picking up certain
rocks, doing core samples,
391
00:23:44,724 --> 00:23:49,829
getting a good idea and
then labeling certain areas
392
00:23:49,929 --> 00:23:51,564
and grids.
393
00:23:51,664 --> 00:23:55,401
I think it was more
of an excavation
394
00:23:55,502 --> 00:23:59,739
and figuring out
what was out there.
395
00:23:59,839 --> 00:24:02,008
And when they found
certain things they needed,
396
00:24:02,108 --> 00:24:05,778
they would start small
mining operations.
397
00:24:05,878 --> 00:24:07,480
>>DAVID: Did anybody
from Earth that we
398
00:24:07,580 --> 00:24:10,783
would know of get like
the dog-and-pony show
399
00:24:10,883 --> 00:24:12,919
maybe to help keep them
quiet, like a president
400
00:24:13,019 --> 00:24:16,623
or prime minister,
early in this game?
401
00:24:16,723 --> 00:24:18,725
Did they get to see what
was going on so they knew
402
00:24:18,825 --> 00:24:21,928
what they were involved in?
403
00:24:22,028 --> 00:24:25,364
>>GOODE: I believe
Eisenhower may have.
404
00:24:25,464 --> 00:24:28,668
He was the one that
ended up, ironically--
405
00:24:28,768 --> 00:24:35,542
him being a general
in World War II,
406
00:24:35,642 --> 00:24:39,178
I imagine it was very
difficult for him
407
00:24:39,278 --> 00:24:42,915
to come to terms
signing treaties
408
00:24:43,015 --> 00:24:46,553
with these German
breakaway groups.
409
00:24:46,653 --> 00:24:47,954
>>DAVID: Oh, yeah.
410
00:24:48,054 --> 00:24:50,022
>>GOODE: I can imagine it
was really hard for him.
411
00:24:50,122 --> 00:24:57,864
But I think he ended up
after-- in 1952, things really
412
00:24:57,964 --> 00:25:00,600
got heated because
we were turning down
413
00:25:00,700 --> 00:25:04,003
the offers, the demands.
414
00:25:04,103 --> 00:25:08,040
The Germans were
making a lot of demands
415
00:25:08,140 --> 00:25:14,146
about wanting access to the
United States and our resources
416
00:25:14,246 --> 00:25:16,983
as a part of a treaty.
417
00:25:17,083 --> 00:25:20,119
And we were denying it.
418
00:25:20,219 --> 00:25:21,788
We told them no.
419
00:25:21,888 --> 00:25:24,924
We were trying to play
hardball negotiations.
420
00:25:25,024 --> 00:25:29,729
And through the Paper Clip, this
German secret breakaway group
421
00:25:29,829 --> 00:25:33,032
knew that the highest
law in the land
422
00:25:33,132 --> 00:25:36,969
was that the United States
didn't want any of its people
423
00:25:37,069 --> 00:25:42,474
to know about the existence
of extraterrestrials or higher
424
00:25:42,575 --> 00:25:45,411
technology, so they used
that against us to force
425
00:25:45,511 --> 00:25:48,815
us to sign a treaty with them.
426
00:25:48,915 --> 00:25:53,820
And in that process,
I'm sure that Eisenhower
427
00:25:53,920 --> 00:25:59,726
more than likely, along with all
of these corporate people that
428
00:25:59,826 --> 00:26:02,895
saw dollar signs, got
the dog-and-pony show,
429
00:26:02,995 --> 00:26:08,134
and then the corporate people
were just 100% on board
430
00:26:08,234 --> 00:26:13,773
and wanted to exploit everything
that the Germans had found.
431
00:26:13,873 --> 00:26:16,809
>>DAVID: Sure, that makes sense.
432
00:26:16,909 --> 00:26:19,145
I don't really have
a strong sense--
433
00:26:19,245 --> 00:26:21,748
you've just kind of said
"moons and asteroids."
434
00:26:21,848 --> 00:26:24,583
So what moons are
we talking about?
435
00:26:24,684 --> 00:26:26,318
How many of the moons
in our solar system--
436
00:26:26,418 --> 00:26:28,621
because there's a lot of
moons in our solar system.
437
00:26:28,721 --> 00:26:29,656
>>GOODE: Yes.
438
00:26:29,756 --> 00:26:31,023
>>DAVID: There's at least 100.
439
00:26:31,123 --> 00:26:31,724
>>GOODE: Right.
440
00:26:31,824 --> 00:26:32,959
There's a lot more 100.
441
00:26:33,059 --> 00:26:33,660
>>DAVID: OK.
442
00:26:33,760 --> 00:26:37,163
So how far did this go?
443
00:26:37,263 --> 00:26:39,098
And how much did it
expand over time?
444
00:26:39,198 --> 00:26:41,634
What were the
earliest moons that
445
00:26:41,734 --> 00:26:45,237
were conquered or landed on?
446
00:26:45,337 --> 00:26:47,606
>>GOODE: All of this is
very tricky diplomatically
447
00:26:47,707 --> 00:26:54,714
because a lot of moons are
off limits to everybody
448
00:26:54,814 --> 00:27:01,654
because they're diplomatic
territory, "owned" by some
449
00:27:01,754 --> 00:27:04,290
of these 40 or 60 groups.
450
00:27:04,390 --> 00:27:05,491
>>DAVID: The Super Federation.
451
00:27:05,591 --> 00:27:07,193
>>GOODE: Super
Federation people,
452
00:27:07,293 --> 00:27:10,062
especially around Saturn.
453
00:27:10,162 --> 00:27:11,197
>>DAVID: Really?
454
00:27:11,297 --> 00:27:12,298
Saturn has a lot of moons.
455
00:27:12,398 --> 00:27:13,866
>>GOODE: Yeah, yeah.
456
00:27:13,966 --> 00:27:18,905
But there was a lot of activity
around the moons of Jupiter.
457
00:27:19,005 --> 00:27:20,572
>>DAVID: Germans and ICC people?
458
00:27:20,673 --> 00:27:21,640
>>GOODE: Mm-hmm.
459
00:27:21,741 --> 00:27:23,876
And Uranus.
460
00:27:23,976 --> 00:27:30,216
And then the asteroid belt.
But I don't know or remember
461
00:27:30,316 --> 00:27:41,694
any actual moon names or what
actual element or resource
462
00:27:41,794 --> 00:27:46,198
they were exploiting from
which planetary body.
463
00:27:46,298 --> 00:27:48,267
>>DAVID: Well, Io is one
of these weird ones that
464
00:27:48,367 --> 00:27:52,004
has all these volcanoes and
stuff like that around Jupiter.
465
00:27:52,104 --> 00:27:55,307
And it's very close,
and it's quite hot.
466
00:27:55,407 --> 00:27:58,310
Is a moon like that too
inhospitable for them
467
00:27:58,410 --> 00:27:59,912
to land on?
468
00:28:00,012 --> 00:28:04,116
>>GOODE: Yeah, there's some that
they could not get access to.
469
00:28:04,216 --> 00:28:06,719
I remember reading--
there was one moon that
470
00:28:06,819 --> 00:28:10,022
was circling around a gas
giant that was spewing
471
00:28:10,122 --> 00:28:16,428
some cloud of some element
out that they were collecting,
472
00:28:16,528 --> 00:28:23,770
they were collecting from
space from behind the moon.
473
00:28:23,870 --> 00:28:25,637
I know that sounds ridiculous.
474
00:28:25,738 --> 00:28:27,940
>>DAVID: No, not
at all, actually.
475
00:28:28,040 --> 00:28:32,779
>>GOODE: I haven't seen anything
that says a moon around a gas
476
00:28:32,879 --> 00:28:35,481
giant is spewing stuff
into space, but--
477
00:28:35,581 --> 00:28:36,783
>>DAVID: Well, I actually have.
478
00:28:36,883 --> 00:28:39,752
Io, as we were
just talking about,
479
00:28:39,852 --> 00:28:42,721
does have very active
volcanoes that are spewing off
480
00:28:42,822 --> 00:28:44,190
a whole bunch of particles--
481
00:28:44,290 --> 00:28:45,491
>>GOODE: Into space?
482
00:28:45,591 --> 00:28:47,193
>>DAVID: --that have created
a ring that actually looks
483
00:28:47,293 --> 00:28:50,496
like a saucer falling,
when the saucer falls
484
00:28:50,596 --> 00:28:53,232
and it's kind of doing this
as it's coming to a rest.
485
00:28:53,332 --> 00:28:57,103
That ring tips with the
gravitational field of Jupiter.
486
00:28:57,203 --> 00:28:58,871
And there's been a
significant increase
487
00:28:58,971 --> 00:29:01,908
in the particle density of
that ring since the 1970s
488
00:29:02,008 --> 00:29:03,375
that NASA has tracked.
489
00:29:03,475 --> 00:29:05,477
>>GOODE: Have they done a
spectral analysis of what
490
00:29:05,577 --> 00:29:07,046
the chemical is coming out?
491
00:29:07,146 --> 00:29:09,148
>>DAVID: Yeah, and it's
got lots of weird stuff
492
00:29:09,248 --> 00:29:13,152
in it like argon and neon
and helium and oxygen
493
00:29:13,252 --> 00:29:16,755
and a lot of things that
we might be able to use.
494
00:29:16,856 --> 00:29:18,024
>>GOODE: OK.
495
00:29:18,124 --> 00:29:19,425
>>DAVID: So that does
make sense to me.
496
00:29:19,525 --> 00:29:20,927
>>GOODE: OK.
497
00:29:21,027 --> 00:29:21,828
>>DAVID: Every time I ask
you questions, I'm learning
498
00:29:21,928 --> 00:29:22,862
all kinds of new stuff.
499
00:29:22,962 --> 00:29:24,363
So this is really mind-blowing.
500
00:29:24,463 --> 00:29:27,733
This is "Cosmic Disclosure"
because you need to know.
501
00:29:27,834 --> 00:29:30,502
I'm David Wilcock, and
we'll see you next time.
502
00:29:30,602 --> 00:29:34,473
[theme music]
40117
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