the purple tin wrote: » Here is some more food for though about the inter-dimensional theory. The most popular message by far that aliens pass on to people is to warn them about nuclear weapons, telling them that we should get rid of them at once or we will destroy the planet. Whitley Streiber says they showed him a mental image of the planet exploding into pieces. There have been a lot of UFO sightings over nuclear power plants and military bases where nukes are being stored. Back at the time of the Roswell crash, they were storing nuclear missiles there. UFOs were spotted over the base for about a month or so before the crash. Same with the Rendlesham Forest incident in England in 1980. US nukes were being stored there secretly. The UFOs are often seen shining what looks like a beam of light into the silos and warehouses where the missiles are kept. Even more bizarre, in a US base, that happened, and somehow a missile was completely dismantled and all the pieces laid out perfectly on the floor in the space of a couple of minutes. In another base in America the missiles started to go offline one by one so that they couldn't be launched. technicians couldn't understand why as there was no fault in the system. In an incident in the Soviet Union missiles actually went into launch sequence on their own and couldn't be stopped, they had to start pulling fuses to prevent them from launching. There have also been UFOs seen buzzing missiles during test launches, the missiles either broke up or exploded in mid-air. So why would aliens be so interested in nukes and nuclear energy if they have moved so far beyond it or even by-passed it altogether? Well, there are scientists who believe that a nuclear explosion doesn't just effect us in our dimension, it is so powerful that it can actually have an effect on other dimensions too. Maybe when we test nukes we are also doing damage in their world. So if we ever had a nuclear war it might be just as bad for them over there as it is for us over here.
Fuzzyduzzy wrote: » He was asked to install cctv by the owner. His appearance in court only furthers his credibility as he told the judge he worked at S4. The judge also said he couldn't find records of Lazar. Facing 5 years imprisonment, I'm certain this would be the right time for honesty.
jmlad2020 wrote: » Is also seems odd that someone who worked with Alien technology would have their educational and birth certs eliminated from public record in the days where a single file gone missing from a file cabinet would adequately remove someone's trace. Did he admit to installing CCTV in a brothel? who's to say it wasn't an attempt to discredit him. Maybe he is a secret pervert, that doesn't really make him any less credible imo. This wacko also installed a Jet engine on his bicycle.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » Yes he worked at los alamos, that much seems probable. What job did he have though? It seems odd that somebody who worked on alien technology would end up installing CCTV in a brothel.
Fuzzyduzzy wrote: » The Bob Lazar story is interesting. Yes, his qualification history is undocumented but his claim that part of his history was erased to discredit him is evidential in the way in which he was indeed employed by Los Alamos laboratory (pay slips from the Department of Naval Intelligence and his name in the Los Alamos phone book) and at a later court hearing (installing cctv cameras in an illegal brothel) when he was facing 5 years imprisonment. Again, he claimed to work for Los Alamos in S4 before a judge. This would have been the time to come clean if he had to. The judge also stated that he could not find many records of Lazar, such as his birth certificate. At the time he was also ridiculed for suggesting the Department of Naval Intelligence would be associated with this project. Along with some of his other claims, look how often the Department of Naval Intelligence has come up in association with UFOs since then (Google ONI UFOs, AATIP was funded by them). I agree, it's interesting what he said about element 115 being used to power the crafts but that wouldn't be one of the things to make me believe him, because the elements are named in numeric order. Therefore it was possible an element 115 would be discovered at some point.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » he appeared in a phone directory. that doesnt mean he was a physicist or anything like that. we know he wasnt anything of that caliber as he doesn't have the education for it.
bangkok wrote: » a hand scanner with longs pins on it as he described it, used to measure the size of bones in your hand he thought at the time. years later was found out thats what the US navy used. his name showed up in the Los Alamos National Laboratory phone directory, you dont go there unless you have a degree, do you think they hired him straight from school?? there no chance in hell someone can lie that much for years and not get found out. he knew way too much
ohnonotgmail wrote: » 30 years later one showed up? what are you on about? He claims to have started working there in late 80's. did we only get hand scanner 30 years after that? are you forgetting that he claims to hold degrees that he doesn't? He claims to have been asked to work on alien technology though he never got further than a junior college. does that hold up to you?
bangkok wrote: » it was a hanger built into the side of a mountain. the big deal about the scanner was no one believed him when he said about it as nobody knew it even existed. 30 years later then one shows up. also, brought friends out to see the UFO test flights on 3 different occasions at Papooose lake and not groom lake, he knew the exact time the ufos would be flown. i have no doubt he worked on Alien Tech there there are no holes in his story and if he was lying it would have come out by now.
Hamsterchops wrote: » I was thinking Erich von Däniken and his 1968 book, Chariots of the Gods.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » It is entirely possible he worked in the building. that doesn't mean he was working on alien technology. as for the hand scanner what is the big deal? we know hand scanners existed.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » Even an old cynic like me would be impressed by that.
gerrybbadd wrote: » Of course it's not. Some people wouldn't be happy if Lazar was to ride down the road in a UFO waving at everyone as he passed by.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » i'm sure he does. none of it is evidence that he worked on alien technology.
gerrybbadd wrote: » This is based on research so far. Lazar reckons further research will produce an isotope closer to his description in future.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » predicting that there may be a particular element of a particular weight is just basic chemistry. what he said said about it though is nonsense. I think we have managed to create about 50 atoms of the stuff. 50 atoms. and its melting point is well below what Lazar said it was so its use as any kind of exotic material for alien spacecraft is nonsense.
bangkok wrote: » what about s4 or the hand scanner?
gerrybbadd wrote: » Again, working from memory here, the material was used for propulsion, rather than for the fabric of the spacecraft itself