影片說明
A few days ago, 161 classified UAP files were released to the public that include more than 400 incidents of previously unseen videos showing ‘unclassified objects’ around the world and the truth is, I still don’t know what to believe…
Which is exactly why I wanted to have today’s discussion. Dan Farah and Dr Harold Puthoff join me on The Diary Of A CEO to understand why this subject has suddenly become impossible to ignore.
Dan has spent years interviewing senior military officials, intelligence figures and government insiders for his documentary The Age of Disclosure. Harold has spent decades working with organisations including the NSA, CIA and Department of Defense studying advanced aerospace science and physics.
One of the things I’ve always struggled with conspiracies like this is that I don’t know why that information would necessarily fall into the hands of government officials.
If there was something out there, we would have seen a very clear image of this thing by now.
What I’m trying to do is interrogate this from all angles. Could it have been something else??
We covered:
- The CIA confirming that aliens are real?!
- Why so many sightings happen around military and nuclear sites.
- The story behind the famous “Tic Tac” incident.
- The alleged 80-year cover up around UAPs.
- The physics theories behind how these objects might move.
I tried to push back throughout this conversation because I think this subject demands skepticism as much as curiosity.
I think the reason conversations about UAPs make people uncomfortable is because they sit right at the edge of what we think is possible and historically, humans don’t deal very well with uncertainty.
What became fascinating to me was hearing serious people with serious reputations willing to go on record about what they believe they’ve seen.
You can’t ignore the fact that highly credible people are willing to risk their reputations to speak publicly about this.
Whether you walk away convinced, skeptical or even more confused, I think this conversation forces you to confront how little we really know.