Bob Lazar Wasn't Lying: Element 115, Area 51, and the Controlled Drip of UAP Disclosure
Bob Lazar described Element 115 as an alien propulsion fuel in 1989, fourteen years before science officially confirmed the element's existence as Moscovium. I'm not saying that's a coincidence, I'm saying the timing of that confirmation lands suspiciously close to when the UAP conversation went mainstream. This dispatch also covers Logan Paul's secretly recorded UFO footage, the ultraterrestrial P-47/P-52 theory, Project Looking Glass, and a string of anomalous stories from blue rain in South Africa to a United Airlines runway collision at Newark.
// CHAPTERS
- 0:00Bob Lazar, the S4 Documentary, and Logan Paul's UFO Footage — I open on the core Lazar thread: his description of a glowing orange disc flying over the Nevada desert, and how Logan Paul secretly recorded footage of what he believes matches exactly what the S4 documentary recreated from Lazar's account.
- 1:35Element 115: Made-Up Game Lore or Real Alien Fuel? — I trace Element 115 from Call of Duty zombie lore to its real-world identity as Moscovium, a synthetic element first produced in a Russian lab that decays in fractions of a second. Lazar named it in 1989. Science confirmed it in 2003. I question whether that fourteen-year gap is coincidence.
- 3:34Pyramids, Underground Structures, and a Society We Can't Account For — I cover satellite radio tomography findings suggesting structures extend over a kilometer beneath the Egyptian pyramids in columnar formations surrounded by coils, and I share my view that the pyramids predate recorded human history by multiple civilizational resets.
- 4:01The Ultraterrestrial Theory: P-47s, P-52s, and Project Looking Glass — I break down Amy Eskridge's ultraterrestrial framework, in which a near-future apocalypse splits humanity into underground Grays (P-47, present plus 47,000 years) and surface-surviving Nordic-type beings (P-52), both of whom independently invent time travel and return to our era. I connect this to Project Looking Glass and the Project Blue Beam narrative.
- 6:11Area 51 Mutant Video, the AI Chicken, and CRISPR Anxiety — I assess a viral 'Area 51 mutant' clip, conclude the mutation itself is plausible but the Area 51 label is nonsense, and note that going frame by frame revealed the second pair of legs appearing out of nowhere, which reads as AI generation to me.
- 8:2245 Seconds in a Minute: The Time Acceleration Claim — I cover the viral claim that a minute now contains only 45 seconds as measured by the Mississippi method, explain exactly why the methodology is flawed (people's speech rates vary), and decline to endorse it while acknowledging time subjectively feels compressed.
- 9:40Blue Rain in South Africa, Sodium Polyacrylate, and Cloud Seeding — I revisit my prior coverage of blue jelly balls falling on a South African family, identify the substance as sodium polyacrylate, trace similar events back to 2012, and examine whether piezoelectric transducers used in cloud seeding technology could explain how they're getting into the atmosphere.
- 13:42Benjamin Franklin's Deadly Glass Harmonica and the Lead Crystal Poisoning — I cover the glass harmonica Franklin built from 37 lead crystal bowls, explaining how players were slowly poisoned by lead absorbed through wet fingertips during hours of performance, with a dry note about the CPSC's track record on product safety.
- 15:15Matt Lobin, the EF3 Tornado, and Amory, Mississippi — I identify meteorologist Matt Lobin and the March 24-27, 2023 tornado outbreak as the source of the viral 'Dear Jesus, please help them' broadcast, confirming two deaths and over fifty injuries in Amory, Mississippi.
- 16:54Epstein, Sumerian Shekels, and the Origins of Money as Sacred Exchange — I cover a segment connecting the oldest known token currency, the Sumerian shekel used to pay for temple priestesses, to the concept of sex magic as practiced by Aleister Crowley and allegedly Jeffrey Epstein, flagging a forthcoming documentary I'm building on that thread.
- 21:03United Airlines Strikes Bakery Truck at Newark: What Happened on Runway 29 — I report the United Airlines landing incident in which an aircraft diverted to Newark's runway 29 due to wind conditions struck a light pole and then hit a bakery delivery truck at approximately 160 mph. The driver survived with minor injuries. Fault is still under investigation.
- 24:21Python Blood, PASS Molecule, and the Next Generation of Weight-Loss Drugs — I cover a Nature Metabolism study identifying paratyramine sulfate (PASS) in Burmese python blood as a molecule that rose to more than 1,000 times its baseline after feeding, caused obese mice to lose roughly 9% of body weight in 20 days, and appears to target hunger signals in the hypothalamus via a pathway distinct from GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic.
- 34:58Arizona Wildfire at 0% Containment and the Smart City Question — I cover a fast-moving Arizona wildfire exceeding 500 acres with zero containment, compare the conditions to the LA fires, and flag the speculation that destruction of land in Arizona could be a precursor to smart city redevelopment without committing to that claim directly.
Bob Lazar's 1989 Claims and Logan Paul's Secretly Recorded UFO Footage
Bob Lazar described a glowing orange disc lifting off in the Nevada desert outside Area 51 in the late 1980s. He knew the flight schedule. He took people out to watch. The disc turned on, glowed orange, and performed maneuvers that no known aircraft could replicate. That account has been on the record for nearly four decades.
What's new is Logan Paul. After watching the S4 documentary, which recreated what Lazar described seeing, Paul apparently recognized footage he had secretly recorded after a content creator refused to sell it to him. He released that recording on Jesse Michaels' podcast with a simple observation: that's exactly the craft from the documentary.
I'm not in a position to verify Paul's footage independently. But the alignment between what Lazar described, what the S4 documentary recreated, and what Paul says he captured is either a remarkable coincidence or something worth tracking closely.
Element 115, Moscovium, and the Suspicious Fourteen-Year Gap
Bob Lazar told the public in 1989 that alien craft used Element 115 as a fuel source, generating gravity fields to power propulsion. At the time, the element didn't exist in any periodic table. It wasn't naturally found on Earth, and as far as most people knew, it might not exist at all.
Element 115 was officially confirmed and named Moscovium in 2003. It was synthesized by smashing americium and calcium together in a particle accelerator at a lab in Russia. It decays in fractions of a second. We cannot produce a stable version, which means we have no way to test whether Lazar's propulsion claims hold up.
Here's the part that catches my attention: Lazar's claim preceded official scientific confirmation by fourteen years. That confirmation landed right as UAP disclosure was beginning to gain mainstream traction. Whether that timeline reflects deliberate credibility management or genuine scientific progress is a question I can't answer with the evidence I have. But I'm not prepared to call it irrelevant.
Anti-Gravity or Something Else: The Force Bob Lazar Says Nobody Has Named
Lazar's position on the propulsion mechanism is more nuanced than most summaries give him credit for. He's not simply claiming the craft uses anti-gravity. His view, as he's expressed it publicly, is that the force involved is something entirely different, something no human physicist has yet discovered or even named.
That's a harder claim to dismiss than it sounds. If the phenomenon doesn't fit within existing physics categories, then the absence of evidence isn't the same as evidence of absence. Whether Lazar is correct or is running a long-form piece of theater, that particular framing is intellectually honest in a way that some UFO claims aren't.
Structures Beneath the Pyramids: Satellite Tomography and the Kilometer-Deep Columns
Satellite radio tomography has reportedly identified structures beneath the Egyptian pyramids extending more than a kilometer into the earth. These aren't vague anomalies. They're described as giant columns or pillars surrounded by coils, descending vertically from the pyramid bases.
If accurate, the pyramids as we see them are just the top of a much larger engineered system. What that system was doing is unknown. The speculation that it served as some form of technology is just that, speculation. But the physical scale implied by a kilometer-deep installation changes the engineering question significantly.
My own view is that the pyramids predate recorded human history, and possibly predate humanity itself by more than one civilizational cycle. I know that's a strong position. I hold it anyway.
The Ultraterrestrial Theory: P-47s, P-52s, and What Amy Eskridge Said Before She Died
The late Amy Eskridge argued that the beings we call aliens may not be extraterrestrial at all. They may be us, specifically humans from approximately 47,000 and 52,000 years in our future. The P-47s and P-52s designations refer to present-plus timeframes.
The framework goes like this: a near-future apocalypse splits humanity into two groups. One goes underground and over millennia becomes the Grays, smaller, larger-eyed, the most commonly reported alien type in contactee accounts. The other survives on the surface, grows taller, and becomes what witnesses describe as Nordic-type beings. Both groups independently develop time travel and return to our era.
There's an internal logic problem I flagged immediately: if you go underground, you'd need larger eyes to see in the dark, not smaller ones. The theory assigns large eyes to the surface group and small eyes to the underground group. That's backwards. Either the theory has a flaw or the evolutionary pressure worked differently than the obvious prediction. Either way, it's worth noting before accepting the framework wholesale.
Amy Eskridge is described as having been 'unlived,' a phrase that carries obvious implications. I can't verify the circumstances of her death from what I have here, but the framing is consistent with how this community talks about individuals whose public claims are considered dangerous to powerful interests.
Project Looking Glass and the Unavoidable Future Catastrophe
Project Looking Glass is described as a classified program in which scientists built a device capable of observing future events. What they reportedly saw was a civilizational catastrophe, an unavoidable one. The key detail is that no matter what interventions were attempted in the present, the outcome remained constant.
If that account is accurate, it reframes the entire purpose of the P-47 and P-52 time travelers. They may not be here to prevent the event. They may be here to ensure it happens, or to manage what comes after. Neither option is comforting.
I flagged this framework as fitting neatly into what I'd describe as the Project Blue Beam narrative architecture. The seeds of this story have been planted across multiple information cycles: the White House statement last April, the viral Area 51 time dilation man allegedly connected to NASA, and the Baron Trump novels by Ingersoll Lockwood, which keep surfacing in these conversations in ways that feel less accidental each time.
The Area 51 Mutant Video and Why Going Frame by Frame Matters
A viral clip circulating under the 'Area 51 mutant' label shows what appears to be a biologically anomalous creature. The original content creator presenting the clip concluded the mutation is real. His reasoning: mutations happen in nature all the time.
I went frame by frame. A second pair of legs appears out of thin air mid-clip. That's not how real mutations work. Real biological mutations affect development from conception. They don't materialize during existing footage. My assessment is that this is AI-generated.
The Area 51 label is also nonsense on its face. Area 51 is a classified aircraft and aerospace testing facility. Whatever goes on there, manufacturing mutant animals isn't consistent with its documented institutional purpose. The label is designed to generate clicks, not convey information.
45 Seconds in a Minute: Why the Mississippi Method Proves Nothing
A viral claim holds that a minute now contains only 45 seconds, measured by counting 'one Mississippi, two Mississippi' against a clock. Multiple people on TikTok are reporting this and treating it as evidence that time itself has changed since 2020.
The methodology is broken in a way that should be obvious. People's words-per-second rates vary. They vary between individuals, they vary for the same individual depending on mood, caffeine intake, and how quickly they're trying to count. A radio clock measured against verbal counting tells you about the counter's speech rate, not about the structure of time.
If you want to test whether time is accelerating, you need an atomic clock compared against another atomic clock, or some measurable physical constant. 'One Mississippi' doesn't qualify. That said, I understand why the claim resonates. Time does feel compressed. That's a real psychological phenomenon. It just doesn't mean a minute has 45 seconds.
Blue Jelly Balls Raining in South Africa: Sodium Polyacrylate and the Cloud Seeding Thread
I covered this before. A woman in South Africa sent footage of blue jelly balls falling on her parents' property. I traced the substance and identified it as sodium polyacrylate, a hydrophilic polymer used in products like water-absorbing beads. It's non-biodegradable and doesn't decompose quickly in the environment.
This isn't a new phenomenon. Similar events were documented as far back as 2012. The question I kept returning to is how sodium polyacrylate gets into the atmosphere in sufficient quantities to fall as precipitation.
I ran the question through AI and landed on cloud seeding as the nearest relevant technology. Piezoelectric transducers, which convert electrical charges from solid materials into energy, aren't directly used in cloud seeding. But they can contribute to monitoring and controlling how seeding materials disperse. The AI flagged that sound can influence the dispersal of cloud seeding materials. South Africa witnesses also reported a strange humming and sound pulsing during the same storm events. I'm not presenting that as a conclusion. I'm presenting it as a correlation worth sitting with.
There's also a report from a glass harmonica reference in the same segment worth flagging separately: the instrument inventor Benjamin Franklin built from 37 lead crystal bowls was eventually found to poison its players through lead absorbed directly into skin during performance. The CPSC's reputation for lax product safety guidelines makes that history feel less distant than it should.
Matt Lobin, Amory Mississippi, and the EF3 Tornado of March 2023
The meteorologist on camera saying 'Dear Jesus, please help them' was Matt Lobin. The date was during the tornado outbreak of March 24 through 27, 2023. An EF3 tornado was tracking directly toward Amory, Mississippi.
Lobin could see it coming and knew there was essentially nothing left to do. The town was in the path. It got hit. Two people died. More than fifty were injured. Significant structural damage was reported.
There aren't many broadcast meteorologists who would show that kind of unfiltered emotion on air. Most would maintain professional composure. Lobin didn't, and whatever you think about the circumstances, that moment was real.
Sumerian Shekels, Temple Prostitution, Sex Magic, and the Epstein Connection
The oldest token currency on record is the Sumerian shekel, and its original purpose was specific: it was used to pay for access to temple priestesses. This wasn't considered frivolous. In the Sumerian framework, the encounter was a sacred act, a mechanism for experiencing the divine.
The economic structure around it was straightforward. You brought a portion of your annual wheat crop to a riverside temple as an offering to the god. You received a token. The token bought the experience. The temples were built on riverbanks deliberately, positioned on the flow of trade.
I'm connecting this to Jeffrey Epstein because the through-line runs through Aleister Crowley and the practice of sex magic, which frames ritualized sexuality as a mechanism for accessing supernatural power or influence. I'm building a documentary on this. I have the receipts. I'll be releasing it when it's ready.
United Airlines Runway 29 Collision at Newark: What We Know
A United Airlines aircraft landing at Newark was diverted from the standard 11,000-foot runway to runway 29 because of wind conditions. Flying lower than usual due to those same conditions, the plane struck a light pole and then collided with a bakery delivery truck at approximately 160 miles per hour.
The truck driver was singing as he drove. He saw the plane coming at him from the right with no time to react. He survived with minor injuries, which is genuinely remarkable at that impact speed.
Footage shows the landing gear making contact with the truck. As of my coverage, no definitive fault assignment had been made. The investigation was ongoing. The pilot's decision to use runway 29 appears to have been operationally required given the conditions, which complicates any straightforward blame narrative.
Python Blood, PASS, and a Potential Alternative to Ozempic
Burmese pythons can swallow a deer whole and then not eat again for up to a year. Scientists wanted to know what drives that mechanism, so they took blood samples from pythons before and after feeding. They found 28 metabolites that changed. One stood out: a molecule called paratyramine sulfate, or PASS.
After feeding, PASS rose to more than 1,000 times its pre-meal level in python blood. The same molecule exists in human blood, where it also rises after eating, just not as dramatically. The researchers gave PASS to obese mice. After 20 days, the treated mice lost around 9% of their body weight compared to controls.
The mechanism appears to target the hypothalamus, the brain region that regulates hunger signals. That matters because GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy work through gut and brain receptors, which is why they cause nausea, stomach pain, diarrhea, and in severe cases gastroparesis. PASS appears to work through a different pathway. Whether that means fewer side effects in humans is genuinely unknown. This is mouse data published in Nature Metabolism. Drug development from here is a long road. But the mechanism is distinct enough to be worth watching.
Cuba, Arizona Fires, and the Stories Being Buried Right Now
An Arizona wildfire had already exceeded 500 acres at 0% containment at the time of filming, with evacuation orders active. The conditions, dry heat and record temperatures, made containment look unlikely in the short term. I drew the comparison to the LA fires, and I'm not dismissing the theory that some of these events are being allowed to clear land for redevelopment purposes. I'm just not going to be the one to name it directly.
Cuba is a different matter. What's been happening there over the past four to five months is, in my assessment, something being deliberately kept off the main feed. The story is being buried under the weight of other distractions. When it finally surfaces and people see the full picture, the reaction is going to be severe. I'm watching that one closely.
// REFERENCED ENTITIES
- Bob LazarPersonI tracked how Lazar's 1989 claims about Element 115 as an alien propulsion source preceded the element's official scientific discovery by fourteen years, and I'm questioning whether that gap is coincidence or choreography.
- Element 115 (Moscovium)DocumentI examined how this synthetic, highly unstable element with 115 protons was described by Lazar in 1989 but not officially confirmed by science until 2003, and what that timeline implies for his credibility.
- Logan PaulPersonI covered how Logan Paul secretly recorded UFO footage after a content creator refused to sell it, and later released that recording on Jesse Michaels' podcast after watching the S4 documentary about Lazar.
- Area 51PlaceI covered multiple viral claims tied to Area 51, including Lazar's account of reverse-engineering craft at the S4 facility nearby and a viral 'mutant' video falsely attributed to the base.
- S4PlaceI referenced S4 as the classified facility adjacent to Area 51 where Lazar claimed to have worked on recovered alien craft, and noted a documentary recreation of what Lazar described seeing there.
- Project Looking GlassEventI described Project Looking Glass as an alleged top-secret program in which scientists built a device capable of observing future events, reportedly showing an unavoidable civilizational catastrophe regardless of present-day intervention.
- Amy EskridgePersonI referenced the late Amy Eskridge's claims that so-called aliens may be future humans, specifically the P-47 and P-52 ultraterrestrial classification, noting she was described as having been 'unlived.'
- Project Blue BeamEventI flagged Project Blue Beam as a long-theorized psychological operation, noting that the ultraterrestrial time-travel framework appears to serve as its latest narrative layer.
- Jesse MichaelsPersonI noted that Logan Paul released his secretly recorded UFO footage on Jesse Michaels' podcast following the S4 documentary.
- Benny BlancoPersonI covered an unverified TikTok conspiracy theory connecting Benny Blanco, Selena Gomez, and the death of a person named David through alleged organ harvesting, which I flagged as unverified speculation.
- Selena GomezPersonI covered a viral but unverified psychic theory on TikTok alleging Selena Gomez was connected to a suspicious death, tied loosely to her documented history of requiring a kidney transplant.
- Jeffrey EpsteinPersonI referenced Jeffrey Epstein in the context of a broader segment on ancient Sumerian temple currency, sex magic, and Aleister Crowley, flagging a forthcoming documentary I'm preparing on those connections.
- Aleister CrowleyPersonI mentioned Aleister Crowley as a historical practitioner of sex magic whose rituals were presented as contextually linked to the Epstein network in a future documentary I'm working on.
- Matt LobinPersonI identified Matt Lobin as the meteorologist who said 'Dear Jesus, please help them' on air during the EF3 tornado outbreak of March 24-27, 2023, as the tornado bore down on Amory, Mississippi.
- Amory, MississippiPlaceI covered the town of Amory as the direct target of an EF3 tornado during the March 2023 outbreak, resulting in two deaths and over fifty injuries.
- MV HadiasEventI covered footage from a passenger aboard the MV Hadias describing a real-time disease outbreak on the vessel in which multiple people died.
- Newark AirportPlaceI covered the incident in which a United Airlines aircraft, diverted to runway 29 due to wind conditions, struck a light pole and then collided with a bakery delivery truck at approximately 160 mph.
- United AirlinesOrganizationI reported on the United Airlines landing incident at Newark in which an aircraft on runway 29 struck a bakery truck, injuring the driver, with an investigation still ongoing over fault assignment.
- South African Police ServicesOrganizationI reported on the SAPS and Captain Johan Pati Potcher's recovery of a euthanized crocodile from the Komati River that was found to contain human remains, part of a missing persons investigation.
- Captain Johan Pati PotcherPersonI named Captain Johan Pati Potcher as the officer who conducted the dangerous operation to access a crocodile-infested riverbank and retrieve the euthanized reptile from the Komati River.
- Komati RiverPlaceI covered the Komati River as the location of a week-long missing persons search that ended with the discovery of human remains inside a crocodile.
- Benjamin FranklinPersonI covered Benjamin Franklin's invention of the glass harmonica, a 37-bowl lead crystal instrument whose players were unknowingly poisoned by lead absorbed through their fingertips during performance.
- GalenPersonI referenced Galen, the second-century physician, as the originator of the first numerical temperature scale, a nine-degree system anchored by boiling water and ice, predating modern thermometry by over a millennium.
- Ethiopian AirlinesOrganizationI covered the 1996 hijacking of an Ethiopian Airlines flight that was forced to crash-land in the ocean after running out of fuel, using it to illustrate why inflating a life vest inside a flooding aircraft cabin is fatal.
- Burmese PythonsOrganizationI covered a study published in Nature Metabolism identifying the molecule paratyramine sulfate (PASS) in python blood as a potential lead for a new class of weight-loss drugs targeting hypothalamic hunger signals.
- Nature MetabolismDocumentI cited this peer-reviewed journal as the source of the python blood study identifying PASS as a hunger-suppressing molecule that caused obese mice to lose around 9% of body weight over 20 days.
- GLP-1DocumentI compared the PASS mechanism to GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy, noting that PASS appears to target the hypothalamus via a distinct pathway, potentially with fewer gastrointestinal side effects.
- CubaPlaceI flagged ongoing events in Cuba as a story being deliberately suppressed from public attention, predicting the full picture will surface and horrify people when finally disclosed.
- ArizonaPlaceI covered a fast-moving Arizona wildfire that had already burned over 500 acres at 0% containment, noting the comparison to the LA fires and speculating briefly on whether Arizona is being positioned for smart-city redevelopment.
- US CapitolPlaceI covered footage of hidden passageways and a sealed staircase inside the US Capitol near Statuary Hall, said by a tour guide to have been used by British soldiers who attacked Washington in 1814.
- Statuary HallPlaceI referenced Statuary Hall inside the US Capitol as the location adjacent to the hidden staircase shown in footage, noting it was once the actual House chamber.
- Ingersoll LockwoodPersonI mentioned Ingersoll Lockwood's Baron Trump novels as one of several pieces of pre-existing cultural material that appear to seed the broader time-travel and ultraterrestrial narrative now gaining traction.
- West Nile VirusEventI flagged West Nile virus as making new appearances in the United States and Canada within the same news cycle I was covering, citing it alongside the cruise ship disease outbreak as part of a broader pattern.
- CRISPRDocumentI cited CRISPR gene-editing technology in the context of concerns about unregulated DNA manipulation, connecting it to wider anxieties about mutation, biotech overreach, and what happened in 2020.
- Sodium PolyacrylateDocumentI identified sodium polyacrylate as the non-biodegradable polymer found in blue jelly balls reported raining from the sky in South Africa, tracing prior incidents back to 2012.
- Piezoelectric TransducersDocumentI examined piezoelectric transducers in the context of cloud seeding, noting that AI flagged them as potentially relevant to controlling the dispersal of seeding materials, including hypothetically the blue jelly balls.
- NetherlandsPlaceI covered a claim that the Netherlands has closed more than 20 prisons in the last decade due to falling crime rates, while flagging that this conflicts with what I recall about prisoner releases due to overcrowding in the UK.
- TIL ScienceOrganizationI attributed the python PASS molecule segment to the TIL Science account, crediting their breakdown of the Nature Metabolism study.
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// FAQ
- What did Bob Lazar say about Element 115 and when did he say it?
- Bob Lazar publicly claimed in 1989 that extraterrestrial craft used Element 115 to generate gravity fields and power their propulsion systems. He described it as a fuel source that aliens had provided to the reverse-engineering program he claimed to work on at the S4 facility near Area 51. The element wasn't officially confirmed by science until 2003, when it was synthesized in a Russian lab and named Moscovium.
- What is Moscovium and why is it significant to the UAP debate?
- Moscovium is Element 115 on the periodic table, a synthetic element with 115 protons that doesn't occur naturally on Earth. It was first produced by smashing americium and calcium together in a particle accelerator, and it decays almost instantly. Its significance in the UAP context is that Bob Lazar described it as an alien propulsion fuel fourteen years before science officially confirmed it existed, a timeline that raises credibility questions either for Lazar or for the timing of the scientific announcement.
- What did Logan Paul record and where did he release the footage?
- Logan Paul secretly recorded UFO footage from a content creator who had refused to sell it to him. After watching the S4 documentary, which recreated Bob Lazar's description of a glowing orange disc flying over the Nevada desert outside Area 51, Paul said the footage he recorded was exactly what the documentary depicted. He released the recording on Jesse Michaels' podcast.
- What are the P-47 and P-52 ultraterrestrials?
- P-47 and P-52 refer to 'present plus 47,000 years' and 'present plus 52,000 years,' classifications used by the late Amy Eskridge to describe two groups of future humans who allegedly traveled back to our time. In her framework, a near-future apocalypse splits humanity: one group goes underground and evolves into the beings we call Grays, the other survives on the surface and becomes taller, Nordic-type beings. Both groups are said to have independently developed time travel technology.
- What is Project Looking Glass?
- Project Looking Glass is described as a classified government program in which scientists developed a device capable of observing future events. According to the claims I covered, what they saw was an unavoidable civilizational catastrophe: no matter what changes were made in the present, the future outcome remained constant. This detail is often used to explain why the P-47 and P-52 beings may be traveling back to our era, either to ensure the event occurs or to manage its aftermath.
- Who is Matt Lobin and what happened during the 2023 tornado outbreak?
- Matt Lobin is a meteorologist who went viral for saying 'Dear Jesus, please help them' on air while tracking a large EF3 tornado approaching Amory, Mississippi during the tornado outbreak of March 24 through 27, 2023. The tornado hit the town directly, killing two people and injuring more than fifty others. Lobin's visible emotional distress during the broadcast was widely shared on TikTok and described as unusual for broadcast meteorologists.
- What is the PASS molecule and how does it relate to weight loss research?
- PASS stands for paratyramine sulfate, a molecule found in both python and human blood that rises after eating. A study published in Nature Metabolism found that after Burmese pythons feed, PASS rises to more than 1,000 times its baseline level. When researchers gave PASS to obese mice, the treated mice lost around 9% of their body weight over 20 days compared to controls. The molecule appears to target the hypothalamus, the brain region controlling hunger, through a different pathway than GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, potentially with fewer gastrointestinal side effects.
- What caused the United Airlines truck collision at Newark Airport?
- A United Airlines aircraft was diverted from its usual 11,000-foot runway to runway 29 at Newark Airport due to wind conditions. Flying lower than normal for the same reason, the aircraft struck a light pole and then collided with a bakery delivery truck at approximately 160 mph. The truck driver survived with minor injuries. As of my reporting, an investigation was still underway to assign fault, and the pilot's decision to use runway 29 appeared to have been operationally required given the weather.