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October 28, 1997: Mars, Free Energy, UFOs - Dr. Brian O'Leary
Published 2 years, 3 months ago
Description
Art Bell speaks with former NASA scientist-astronaut Dr. Brian O'Leary about Mars, free energy, UFOs, and the state of global consciousness. O'Leary, who received his Ph.D. in astronomy from UC Berkeley and was selected to go to Mars during the Apollo program, describes the current state of zero-point energy research as comparable to the era just after the Wright brothers flew.
O'Leary argues that cold fusion technology could render radioactive waste harmless and that practical free energy devices are five to ten years away, held back primarily by oil industry resistance and lack of investment. He estimates that just one hundred million dollars would be enough to bring the concept to commercial viability. He also addresses the anomalous features at Cydonia on Mars, calling NASA's dismissal of them as mere tricks of shadow "absurd."
Callers ask about remote viewing, which O'Leary confirms experiencing firsthand at Princeton, and about astronauts who have witnessed UFOs. He names Gordon Cooper and Ed Mitchell as fellow space program veterans who have reported sightings. Art and O'Leary also discuss global warming, the finite oil supply, and the urgent need for alternative energy sources.
O'Leary argues that cold fusion technology could render radioactive waste harmless and that practical free energy devices are five to ten years away, held back primarily by oil industry resistance and lack of investment. He estimates that just one hundred million dollars would be enough to bring the concept to commercial viability. He also addresses the anomalous features at Cydonia on Mars, calling NASA's dismissal of them as mere tricks of shadow "absurd."
Callers ask about remote viewing, which O'Leary confirms experiencing firsthand at Princeton, and about astronauts who have witnessed UFOs. He names Gordon Cooper and Ed Mitchell as fellow space program veterans who have reported sightings. Art and O'Leary also discuss global warming, the finite oil supply, and the urgent need for alternative energy sources.