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July 27, 1999: Space Travel - Robert Bigelow | Madalyn Murray O'Hare - James Napier
Published 1 year, 8 months ago
Description
Art Bell opens with the news of Father Malachi Martin's passing, honoring the exorcist and papal advisor as a singular figure who enriched the program over many years. The first guest, James Napier, a veteran television journalist, reveals a private conversation with Madalyn Murray O'Hair that challenges her public identity. After persistent questioning about meaning and purpose, O'Hair reportedly acknowledged an organizing intelligence beyond the scope of human knowing, a striking admission from the woman who removed prayer from American public schools.
The second half features the radio debut of billionaire Robert Bigelow, founder of Bigelow Development Corporation and longtime patron of the National Institute for Discovery Science. Bigelow describes his lifelong fascination with the UFO phenomenon, sparked by family sightings in the 1950s, and shares findings from the NIDS ranch where a newborn calf was stripped of flesh and bone within 45 minutes in broad daylight with no blood on the ground. He confirms his personal conviction that the phenomenon is not connected to government black projects.
Bigelow then unveils his plan to build a privately funded orbital cruise ship, a half-mile-wide rotating habitat accommodating 100 passengers on six-day voyages around the Moon. He argues that reducing launch costs from the shuttle's $10,000 per pound to roughly $550 would make commercial space tourism viable, breaking NASA's monopoly on human spaceflight.
The second half features the radio debut of billionaire Robert Bigelow, founder of Bigelow Development Corporation and longtime patron of the National Institute for Discovery Science. Bigelow describes his lifelong fascination with the UFO phenomenon, sparked by family sightings in the 1950s, and shares findings from the NIDS ranch where a newborn calf was stripped of flesh and bone within 45 minutes in broad daylight with no blood on the ground. He confirms his personal conviction that the phenomenon is not connected to government black projects.
Bigelow then unveils his plan to build a privately funded orbital cruise ship, a half-mile-wide rotating habitat accommodating 100 passengers on six-day voyages around the Moon. He argues that reducing launch costs from the shuttle's $10,000 per pound to roughly $550 would make commercial space tourism viable, breaking NASA's monopoly on human spaceflight.