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April 10, 2004: The Coming Cataclysm - Ed Dames
Published 7 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Art Bell welcomes Major Ed Dames, retired military intelligence officer and remote viewing expert, for a wide-ranging discussion on predictions that appear to be coming true. Dames points to a record-breaking X-48 solar flare from November 2003, which he identifies as the "shot across the bow" he had long predicted would precede a catastrophic solar event he calls the kill shot.
Dames reveals a new harbinger for listeners to watch: when a space shuttle mission is forced to abort due to an intense meteor shower, the end sequence begins. He describes a scenario involving a passing planetary body, massive solar flares striking Earth with weakened magnetic shields, sustained 300-mile-per-hour winds, and a potential pole shift generating ocean waves thousands of feet high. He also reaffirms his long-standing prediction that the first nuclear weapon used in combat will detonate on the Korean Peninsula.
Art opens the show with discussion of the Iraq war, the 9/11 intelligence briefing controversy, and a new song about the program by Canadian artist Sean Hogan. Callers weigh in on American foreign policy and the nature of patriotism before Dames takes the conversation into darker territory.
Dames reveals a new harbinger for listeners to watch: when a space shuttle mission is forced to abort due to an intense meteor shower, the end sequence begins. He describes a scenario involving a passing planetary body, massive solar flares striking Earth with weakened magnetic shields, sustained 300-mile-per-hour winds, and a potential pole shift generating ocean waves thousands of feet high. He also reaffirms his long-standing prediction that the first nuclear weapon used in combat will detonate on the Korean Peninsula.
Art opens the show with discussion of the Iraq war, the 9/11 intelligence briefing controversy, and a new song about the program by Canadian artist Sean Hogan. Callers weigh in on American foreign policy and the nature of patriotism before Dames takes the conversation into darker territory.