September 14, 1995: Flying Saucer Technology, Ozone Hole - Stan Deyo
Apr 23, 2023•2 hr 50 min•Season 1995Ep. 76
Episode description
Stan Deyo joins Art Bell from Perth, Australia, to discuss his recruitment by Edward Teller's associate Dr. James Maxfield in 1971 to work on advanced propulsion systems for disc-shaped aircraft and spacecraft. Deyo describes two categories of craft he helped develop: aircraft that move air electrically around a saucer shape using ionized plasma, and electromagnetic craft that bend gravity through pulsed toroidal magnetic fields, drawing parallels to the Philadelphia Experiment.
Deyo explains why these technologies remain classified, pointing to warring factions vying for global control. He names specific underground research facilities at Pine Gap in Australia, the South Pole, Saudi Arabia, and Norway. He also describes analyzing NASA satellite thermal data revealing alarming heat patterns building beneath the ocean floor off California, Japan, Florida, and the Mediterranean, which he believes signal imminent seismic catastrophe.
Art Bell then speaks with air conditioning technician Pat about the ozone hole over Antarctica, now measured at the size of Europe. Pat explains how CFC-released carbon atoms destroy millions of ozone molecules each and warns that third-world industrialization will worsen the crisis despite domestic regulations.
Deyo explains why these technologies remain classified, pointing to warring factions vying for global control. He names specific underground research facilities at Pine Gap in Australia, the South Pole, Saudi Arabia, and Norway. He also describes analyzing NASA satellite thermal data revealing alarming heat patterns building beneath the ocean floor off California, Japan, Florida, and the Mediterranean, which he believes signal imminent seismic catastrophe.
Art Bell then speaks with air conditioning technician Pat about the ozone hole over Antarctica, now measured at the size of Europe. Pat explains how CFC-released carbon atoms destroy millions of ozone molecules each and warns that third-world industrialization will worsen the crisis despite domestic regulations.
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android
