9/22/2023 0 Comments Element 115 gravity![]() ![]() His story has been analyzed and rejected by skeptics and some ufologists. Lazar has no evidence to support his core claim of alien technology. ![]() Lazar's claims resulted in bringing added public attention to Area 51 and fueling conspiracy theories surrounding its classified activities. He also claims to have read US government briefing documents that described alien involvement in human affairs over the past 10,000 years. Lazar claims he examined an alien craft that ran on an antimatter reactor powered by element 115, which at the time had not yet been synthesized. Lazar alleges that this subsidiary installation is located several kilometres south of the United States Air Force facility popularly known as Area 51. Robert Scott Lazar (/ləˈzɑːr/ born January 26, 1959) is an American conspiracy theorist who claims to have been hired in the late 1980s to reverse-engineer extraterrestrial technology at what he described as a secret site called "S-4". But Lazar describes the specific layout of the UFO he worked on - three levels, seats arranged in an equilateral triangle, three gravity emitters powered by a single central reactor with a very specific shape, outer shell like it was all formed from one moulded piece - in a way that at the very least would make for some compelling sci-fi.īut he can't be telling the truth, can he? I mean, his Wikipedia article begins like this: Usually they're sort of wishy-washy, vague anecdotes about either lights in the sky, or abductions by either cold, probing analysts who treat them like meat and leave them scarred, or new-agey peace-and-love star siblings who bring warnings about how we're defiling our environment. There's something about the very specific details he gives about the mechanics of the craft that stands out among all other UFO stories. and what he said in it - and the way he said it - nagged at my mind for a while afterwards. Next, again due to lack of options, I went back to the Bob Lazar one. Seemed no less convincing than the first time. Recently, I started listening to some of those longer Joe Rogan interviews while drawing - I should look into some other podcasts, but I've never done that before so it was easier to turn to a familiar(ish) one - but while looking through the list of all videos for new ones and realising I either didn't care or know anything about most of his guests, I ended up listening to the Fravor (tic tac) interview a second time. Now, though, after looking into his story in depth from several angles, I'm wondering whether he's actually telling the truth. I wrote that he seemed far too outlandish, and had far too much going against him to possibly be believable. The former seemed too genuine to discount, and got me really seriously wondering whether we were on the verge of a cultural shift, but the latter guy, Bob Lazar. Aliens Bizarre Interesting Media Paranormal Psychology Supernatural UFOs VideosBack in late 2019, ∞ I wrote a post about UFOs ∞, specifically the Nimitz incident - where a bunch of army pilots, most notably Commander David Fravor, saw, detected on radar, and had interactions with a tic-tac-shaped craft - and a guy called Bob Lazar - who claimed to have worked on a secret program reverse-engineering retrieved saucer-shaped craft. ![]()
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