Ross Coulthart Debunks WSJ Article on UAPs and Non-Human Technology
NewsNationJuly 7, 202534 min310,934 views
24 connectionsΒ·40 entities in this videoβCritiquing the Wall Street Journal UAP Article
- π‘ Ross Coulthart dismisses the Wall Street Journal's recent article as a "big yawn" and "nonsense," calling it a "hit job" that misinterprets evidence.
- π― The article suggests UAPs are a cover for secret US aerospace programs, but Coulthart argues this ignores retrieved non-human technology and firsthand witness accounts.
- π He highlights Jay Stratton, Lou Elizondo, and Jake Barber as credible witnesses who have provided firsthand evidence of non-human technology and retrieval programs.
- β οΈ Coulthart criticizes the article's acceptance of claims about EMP devices at Malmstrom Air Force Base, calling it "utterly ridiculous" and a deliberate disinformation attempt.
Phil Schneider and Underground Facilities
- π Coulthart expresses interest in the Phil Schneider case, particularly his 1995 speech about an alleged underground alien battle in New Mexico.
- π While verifying Schneider's background as an engineer in tunneling, Coulthart acknowledges the lack of sourced information regarding the specific Dolce facility.
- π He confirms the existence of hidden underground facilities, likely operated by the US Air Force in collaboration with companies like Lockheed Martin, but cannot confirm details of Schneider's claims.
Avatars and Consciousness Manipulation
- π§ Coulthart discusses the controversial idea of "avatars" influencing UAP disclosure, referencing Slide 9 from a Pentagon briefing.
- β‘ This slide suggests the phenomenon has the capacity to manipulate human cognition and perception, potentially explaining why some believe entities walk among us.
- π¬ He posits that if non-human intelligence can manipulate perception, it could explain how they might appear in human form or influence events.
Aerospace Companies and Disclosure
- βοΈ Coulthart notes that aerospace companies like Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, when questioned about covert non-human technology programs, consistently defer to the Pentagon.
- π’ He suggests this deflection, rather than outright denial, implies their involvement, as publicly listed companies would typically need to disclose material information unless national security exemptions apply.
UAPs, Gravity, and Human Interference
- π°οΈ Coulthart refutes the debunkers' argument that advanced civilizations wouldn't crash, suggesting accidents are not the primary explanation for recovered craft.
- π₯ He shares information that suggests some UAP incidents may be due to high-pulse microwave (HPM) weapons or powerful radar disrupting the craft's propulsion systems.
- β οΈ This raises ethical concerns about humanity's potentially offensive actions against non-human intelligence, rather than simply encountering accidental crashes.
Deja Vu and Consciousness
- π€ Coulthart explores the phenomenon of deja vu, intuition, and precognition, linking them to emerging scientific theories about non-local consciousness.
- π‘ He discusses the hypothesis that the human brain might tap into consciousness outside the physical body, potentially explaining creative insights and intuitive leaps.
- π This area of study, he notes, is gaining traction at the scientific frontier and may offer explanations for phenomena previously dismissed by conventional science.
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40 entities
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Transcript125 segments
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Whatβs Discussed
UAPUFONon-Human TechnologyWall Street JournalDisinformationAROPhil SchneiderUnderground FacilitiesDolce New MexicoAvatarsHuman CognitionConsciousnessAerospace CompaniesLockheed MartinNorthrop GrummanHPM WeaponsGravityDeja Vu
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