Friday, May 13, 2005

Have Scientists Just Proven Bob Lazar Right on Alien Antigravity Systems?

(The short answer is "no." But I love this transcript; even if Lazar is completely pulling this out of his ass, his ideas have an internal consistency seldom encountered among "UFO whistleblower" narratives.)

Knapp: Well, what is it? What have you learned about what gravity is?

Lazar: Gravity is a wave. There are many different theories, wave included. It's been theorized that gravity is also particles, gravitons, which is also incorrect. But gravity is a wave. The basic wave they can actually tap off of an element: why that is I' m not exactly sure.

Knapp: So you can produce your own gravity. What does that mean? What does that allow you to do?

Lazar: It allows you to do virtually anything. Gravity distorts time and space. By doing that, now you're into a different mode of travel, where instead of traveling in a linear method going from Point A to B, now you can distort time and space to where you essentially bring the mountain to Mohammad, you almost bring your destination to you without moving. And since you're distorting time, all this takes place in between moments of time.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Whether or not Lazar is shitting us, it strikes me that alien interstellar craft would have to have some kind of gravitic "drive" along these lines. It sounds like he's describing (true, in a very confused-sounding way) how actually to make a kind of "warp drive" work. I've read in a respectable publication that a warp drive which distorts the continuum ahead of a spacecraft so that it can travel at speeds which would be far in excess of light in ordinary space (but not in "warped space") is actually theoretically possible. It sounds like Lazar is describing how to "do" this kind of warp drive. On Lazar's side, think about it. If some primitive tribesman with no prior contact with modern civilization "captured" a functional automobile, would he be able to describe how it worked to fellow tribespeople in any way that really made sense to them? In fact, would he really understand it himself? So I don't think the fact that it sounds to some people like Lazar is spouting nonsense is NECESSARILY a strike against the story he's trying to tell. (That he's lying about other things like his work background and education is probably a bigger strike against him.)

JohnFen said...

I actually believe that Lazar fundamentally believes what he says. That doesn't mean what he says is true, of course. There's a lot of aspects to the Lazar saga that scream "psyop".

Mac said...

JohnFen-- I agree with you 100%.

Unknown said...

Freidman has invested so much time into opposing Lazar, I wouldn't expect even a casual nod he may have been on to something.

That said, I agree with John, too

JohnFen said...

Oh, and it doesn't look like that article mentioned (or at least I missed it) a pertinent fact: element 115 was discovered last year.

JohnFen said...

Oh, I found the reference. Never mind.

Anonymous said...

i believe he is a very clever and perceptive bullshitter. i actually admire him for it, he has a very good sense of how to make a story ambiguous and intriguing. i think hoaxing is an underappreciated art.

i could be wrong of course, i certainly wouldn't rule out him being part of some psyop operation as either victim or perpetrator (perhaps both?), or at least something akin to that. with all the UFO disinformation business relating to the paul bennewitz affair, which seems to have indisputably occured, who knows?

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