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December 7, 1997: Ron Brown Case - Chris Ruddy | The Brain - Neil Slade
Published 2 years, 2 months ago
Description
Art Bell welcomes investigative reporter Chris Ruddy with breaking developments in the Ron Brown death investigation. Ruddy reveals that a second Armed Forces medical examiner, Lieutenant Colonel David Hause, has come forward to confirm an apparent bullet wound at the top of Commerce Secretary Brown''s head. The first whistleblower, Lieutenant Colonel Steve Cogswell, has faced severe retaliation, including office confinement and military police arriving at his home to seize photographs. Ruddy also reports that all head X-rays from Brown''s examination have gone missing from official files.
In the second half, Neil Slade joins to discuss the untapped potential of the human brain, drawing on eleven years of work with brain researcher T.D.A. Lingo. Slade explains Dr. Paul McLean''s triune brain model, describing how reptilian, mammalian, and primate brain layers compute different behaviors. He identifies the amygdala as a master click switch that, when activated forward, opens access to frontal lobe abilities including creativity, intuition, and extrasensory perception.
Art shares his own powerful precognition experience in Santa Barbara, where overwhelming waves of awareness warned him something was about to happen to his car moments before another driver reversed into it. Slade explains that such abilities are tied to cooperative consciousness and cannot be accessed through selfish motivation.
In the second half, Neil Slade joins to discuss the untapped potential of the human brain, drawing on eleven years of work with brain researcher T.D.A. Lingo. Slade explains Dr. Paul McLean''s triune brain model, describing how reptilian, mammalian, and primate brain layers compute different behaviors. He identifies the amygdala as a master click switch that, when activated forward, opens access to frontal lobe abilities including creativity, intuition, and extrasensory perception.
Art shares his own powerful precognition experience in Santa Barbara, where overwhelming waves of awareness warned him something was about to happen to his car moments before another driver reversed into it. Slade explains that such abilities are tied to cooperative consciousness and cannot be accessed through selfish motivation.