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- DATE OF UPLOAD: December 30, 1989
-
- ORIGIN OF UPLOAD: ParaNet Information Service
-
- CONTRIBUTED BY: Robert B. Klinn - ParaNet Director of
-
- Investigations and Research
-
- ========================================================
-
- (C) Copyright 1989 ParaNet Information Service
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- All Rights Reserved unless copyrighted by Author.
-
- THIS FILE WAS PREPARED BY PARANET ALPHA -- PARANET INFORMATION
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-
- NOTE: THESE FILES ARE NOT FOR REDISTRIBUTION OUTSIDE
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- OF THE PARANET INFORMATION SERVICE NETWORK
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- ========================================================
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-
-
- On the Record, KLAS-TV, Las Vegas, Nevada, 12/9/89, 7:00 p.m.-
-
- 7:30 p.m.
-
-
-
- George Knapp, producer/host
-
- Robert Lazar, guest
-
-
-
- George Knapp:
-
- Hello, and welcome to On the Record.
-
-
-
- One month ago, we began a series of reports about UFOs. With the
-
- exception of a few cranky newspaper people, the response has been
-
- overwhelmingly positive. We've had requests for more information
-
- from all over the country and from all over the world. Tonight
-
- we're going to delve a little deeper into the subject with the
-
- man who was the impetus for our report in the first place, Bob
-
- Lazar.
-
-
-
- Bob, good to have you here. A thumbnail sketch of yourself for
-
- those who might not be familiar with your background.
-
-
-
- Robert Lazar:
-
- I worked at Los Alamos National Lab.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- As a physicist?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- As a physicist, and hired as a senior staff physicist at Area S-
-
- 4, for what I was told anyway was the United States Navy.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Where is S-4?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It's about 10 to 15 miles south of Groom Lake, about 125 miles
-
- north of Las Vegas.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- How did you get the job?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I really don't want to mention the guy who I got it through. But
-
- I was referred to a person at EG&G to drop off my resume to;
-
- that's where I was interviewed; though the job is COMPLETELY
-
- unrelated to EG&G.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- What did they tell you you were going to be doing? Or DID they
-
- tell you?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, they really didn't tell me until the very end. They said a
-
- high-technology job, something that I'd be very interested in.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Okay, so you get hired. And what happens? Do you fly up there?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Fly up there. First day was reading briefings and that sort of
-
- thing. And it became evident to me pretty quickly the level of
-
- technology they were dealing with: gravitational propulsion and
-
- things that science has really only barely touched on.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- We'll get into the things that you saw in a couple of minutes.
-
- But it's been about a little more than three weeks since your
-
- identity was made public. We had you on another program a couple
-
- of months ago -- using an assumed name and having you in
-
- silhouette -- but since your identity has been made public and
-
- since this information has been made public, what's it been like?
-
- What's been the response from people that see you on the street?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The response has been almost all favorable. In fact, everyone
-
- that I've run into has been very supportive, very interested. I
-
- guess there's just two or three letters --
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- -- from people that don't believe you?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah. Essentially.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Responses from other media outlets as well?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- They want to interview you? What do they want?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Essentially everything, yes. Radio interviews, TV interviews. A
-
- lot of people want to dig back into my background and re-trace
-
- everything.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Many of the people who have been calling -- calling us as well --
-
- were under the impression that either you've gone underground or
-
- you've been silenced or we've been silenced by dark and sinister
-
- forces. Anything like that happen to you so far?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That's ridiculous. People are always going over the deep end on
-
- that. And no one's told me -- other than originally -- not to
-
- say anything. And I'm sure no one's come forward to you.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- But in the beginning, they told you to keep quiet about this.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh yeah! It's the most secret program in the United States.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- In what way did they try to make sure you kept your mouth shut?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Everything up to death threats. I mean CONSTANT reminders of it,
-
- signing away my constututional rights for fair trial and that
-
- sort of thing.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- And since this thing, your phone's been tapped, you believe?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, I believe. I have a tap detector, and occasionally after I
-
- pick up the phone, a little red light goes on.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- The reason you came forward with the information to begin with?
-
- Is it related to the fact that they were bothering you?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, it was essentially to stop that. What had happened was, I
-
- sent in a request for my birth certificate, and as it turned out
-
- it wasn't there anymore, that I wasn't born at the hospital! And
-
- that kind of got me wondering what's going on. I put in a
-
- request for some other information, previous jobs, and that was
-
- also gone, and I thought something had to be done before I
-
- disappeared.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- The same thing -- it was Los Alamos? They've never heard of you?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Anything happened since the reports have aired?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- They let me know that they were around by doing stupid, childish
-
- little things. But nothing serious, no.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- You were worried about your LIFE though for a while there,
-
- weren't you?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That was one of the reasons to come on and let everything out on
-
- the air; it's a little of insurance.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Are you worried any more? Do you get the feeling you're over the
-
- hump?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- To some degree, yeah.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Do you find that most people really believe you or that they just
-
- want more information?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I think alot of people believe what I said, but the majority I
-
- think do just want more information, too. It's an in-depth
-
- subject.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Let's look at some of the technology you saw. When did you first
-
- get the idea, what's the first thing you saw that made you
-
- convinced that it's not from here?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The first thing was HANDS-on experience with the anti-matter
-
- reactor.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Explain what that is and how it works and what it does.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It's a plate about 18 inches in diameter with a sphere on top.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- We have a tape of a model that a friend of yours made. You can
-
- narrate along. There it is.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Inside that tower is a chip of Element 115 they just put in
-
- there. That's a super-heavy element. The lid goes on top.
-
-
-
- And as far as any other of the workings of it, I really don't
-
- know, you know, [such as] what's inside the bottom of it . . .
-
-
-
- 115 sets up a gravitational field around the top. That little
-
- wave guide you saw being put on the top: it essentially siphons
-
- off the gravity wave, and that's later amplified in the lower
-
- portion of the craft.
-
-
-
- But just in general, the whole technology is virtually unknown.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Now we saw the model. We saw the pictures of it there. It looks
-
- really, really simple, almost too simple to actually do anything.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Working parts?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- None detectable. Essentially, what the job was was to back-
-
- engineer everthing, where you have a finished product and to step
-
- backwards and find out how it was made or how it could be made
-
- with earthly materials. There hasn't been very much progress.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- How long do you think they've had this technology up there?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It seems like quite a while, but I really don't know.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- What could you do with an anti-matter generator? What does it
-
- do?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It converts anti-matter . . .
-
- It DOESN'T convert anti-matter! There's an annihilation
-
- reaction. It's an extremely powerful reaction, a hundred percent
-
- conversion of matter to energy, unlike a fission or fusion
-
- reaction which is somewhere around eight-tenths of one percent
-
- conversion
-
- of matter to energy.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- How does it work? What starts the reaction going?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Really, once the 115 is put in, the reaction is initiated.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Automatic.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- I don't understand. I mean, there's no button to push or
-
- anything?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, there's no button to push or anything.
-
-
-
- Apparently, the 115 under bombardment with protons lets out an
-
- anti-matter particle. This anti-matter particle will react with
-
- any matter whatsoever, which I imagine there is some target
-
- system inside the reactor. This, in turn, releases heat, and
-
- somewhere within that system there is a one-hundred-percent-
-
- efficient thermionic generator, essentially a heat-to-electrical
-
- generator.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- How is this anti-matter reactor connected to gravity generation
-
- that you were talking about earlier?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Well, that reactor serves two purposes; it provides a tremendous
-
- amount of electrical power, which is almost a by-product. The
-
- gravitational wave gets formed at the sphere, and that's through
-
- some action of the 115, and the exact action I don't think anyone
-
- really knows.
-
-
-
- The wave guide siphons off that gravity wave, and that's
-
- channeled above the top of the disk to the lower part where there
-
- are three gravity amplifiers, which amplify and direct that
-
- gravity wave.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- In essence creating their own gravitational field.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Their own gravitational field.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- You're fairly convinced that science on earth doesn't have this
-
- technology right now? We have it now at S-4, I guess, but we
-
- didn't create it?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Why not? Why couldn't we?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The technology's not even -- We don't even know what gravity IS!
-
-
-
- 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. It's such a far-fetched concept!
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Of course, what the UFO skeptics say is, yeah, there's life out
-
- there elsewhere in the universe; it can never come here; it's
-
- just too darn far. With the kind of technology you're talking
-
- about, it makes such considerations irrelevant about distance and
-
- time and things like that.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Exactly, because when you are distorting time, there's no longer
-
- a normal reference of time. And that's what producing your own
-
- gravity does.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- You can go forward or backward in time? Is that's what you're
-
- saying?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, not essentially. It would be easier with a model. On the
-
- bottom side of the disk are the three gravity generators. When
-
- they want to travel to a distant point, the disk turns on its
-
- side. The three gravity generators produce a gravitational beam.
-
- What they do is they converge the three gravity generators onto
-
- a point and use that as a focal point; and they bring them up to
-
- power and PULL that point towards the disk. The disk itself will
-
- attach ONTO that point and snap back -- AS THEY RELEASE SPACE
-
- BACK TO THAT POINT!
-
-
-
- Now all this happens in the distortion of time, so time is not
-
- incrementing. So the SPEED is essentially infinite.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- We'll get into the disks in a moment. But the first time you saw
-
- the anti-matter reactor in operation or a demonstration -- you
-
- had a couple of demonstrations -- tell me about that.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The first time I saw it in operation, we just put -- a friend I
-
- worked with, Barry -- put the fuel in the reactor, put the lid on
-
- as, as was shown there.
-
-
-
- Immediately, a gravitational field developed, and he said, "Feel
-
- it!" And it felt like you bring two like poles of a magnet
-
- together; you can do that with your hand. And it was FASCINATING
-
- to do that, impossible, except on something with great mass! And
-
- obviously this is just a . . .
-
-
-
- And it was a REPULSION field. In fact, we kind of fooled around
-
- with it for a little while. And we threw golf balls off it. And
-
- it was just a really unique thing.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- And you had other demonstrations to show you that this is pretty
-
- wild stuff, right?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, they did. They were able to channel the field off in a
-
- demonstration that they created an INTENSE gravitational area.
-
- And you began to see a small little black disk form, and that was
-
- the bending of the light.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Just like a black hole floating around?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, well, a black hole is a bad analogy, but yeah, essentially.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- And they gave you some kind of demonstration about time,
-
- involving a candle? Explain how that works.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, they took a candle and lit it and put it in the distorted
-
- gravitational field, which distorts time, and the candle just
-
- stood there. It didn't melt or burn. It was REALLY
-
- unbelievable!
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- You had to be floored by seeing all this.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh I was! That's why I'm kind of laughing about it now because
-
- it must sound ridiculous to everyone. But it's just phenomenal.
-
- I mean this is really alien technology.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- About the 115: We talked a little bit about it in the series of
-
- reports. Explain what it is again and why you believe it could
-
- not be manufactured here.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Okay, it's a super-heavy element: On the periodic chart, which
-
- lists all the elements found on earth and that can be
-
- synthesized, I think the highest element we've synthesized has
-
- been about Element 106.
-
-
-
- Now from 103 -- or actually, anything higher than plutonium up --
-
- the half-life begins to drop; in other words, the element
-
- disintegrates. When you get up to Element 106, it's only around
-
- for a very small amount of time. Even science today theorizes
-
- that up around Element 113 to 116 -- somewhere in there -- they
-
- should again become stable. This is in fact true. That's what
-
- Element 115 is; it's a stable element.
-
-
-
- To synthesize it would be impossible. The way we synthesize
-
- heavy elements is, we take a stable element like bismuth or
-
- something like that, or plutionium, whatever, put it in an
-
- accelerator, and BOMBARD it with protons. Essentially what
-
- you're trying to do is plug in protons into the atoms and
-
- increase the atomic number. To do that to the level of Element
-
- 115 would just take an infinite amount of power and an infinite
-
- amount of time.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- What kinds of things, what capabilities would a heavy element
-
- like this have -- I mean other than producing power? Obviously,
-
- it can produce a LOT of power, right?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It in itself is not anti-matter. It just has a unique property
-
- of producing it. Any of the other basic properties it has I
-
- really don't know of. But using just the anti-matter-producing
-
- property, the potential for a weapon is staggering! It's
-
- absolutely staggering!
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Like what? A pound of it: what could it do?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Well, 2.2 pounds is the energy equivalent of 47 10-megaton
-
- hydrogen bombs. I mean, it's a good bang! And a pound of a
-
- super-heavy element is maybe the size of a plum or something like
-
- that.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- I guess what I've heard most from people who just don't buy the
-
- whole story is that sure, maybe you work at an area called S-4,
-
- and maybe it is a secret area, but what you were shown is stuff
-
- that we've made. That we made this 115 -- if it is 115 -- that
-
- we made the flying disks, that we made these anti-matter
-
- reactors, because these are advances that you just don't know
-
- about.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Hardly.
-
- [Lazar laughs.]
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Why not?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Well, the 115, it's impossible. And the FACT that the main job
-
- of everyone there is to find out how everything's made; I mean
-
- that just contradicts everything right off the bat. The
-
- materials are completely alien to us, and just the overall idea
-
- of the project is: Hey, can we duplicate this with materials
-
- that we have here? So obviously, it was something that was found
-
- or given, for that matter, and we're just trying to duplicate it.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- The 115: Where do you suppose it came from then? I mean, what
-
- kind of environment would that kind of element come from?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The only place that 115 could be made would have to be in a
-
- natural situation, somewhere maybe on the fringes of a supernova
-
- or somewhere around maybe a binary star system, where there was
-
- more mass in the primordial mix of that system, where heavier
-
- elements would have had a chance to form, when the stars were
-
- collapsing and there were huge amounts of energy being released.
-
- It's something along these lines; it has to be a naturally-
-
- occurring element.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- You saw an anti-matter reactor. You saw gravity-propulsion
-
- systems in flying disks, flying saucers. You saw this Element
-
- 115. You also read a series of reports that had other stunning
-
- information. Can you give an overview of the kind of things that
-
- were in these reports?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The reason I didn't do that before was, first of all they were
-
- just reports. Everything else I had hands-on experience with.
-
-
-
- Now there was LOTS of strange information in the reports, but
-
- there again it's just printed material and it could be
-
- disinformation. I don't know. But certainly, the information I
-
- did read in the reports about 115, the disks, the grav -- I mean,
-
- that all had material that related to that.
-
-
-
- The reports went into aliens and even went along the lines of
-
- religious --
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Well, we can let our audience know. I mean we discussed this,
-
- when we were putting this series of reports together, whether to
-
- get into the alien thing or not, and we decided not to for the
-
- time being. It's not like you're hiding something from the
-
- audience or whatever, it was just a decision we made. But you
-
- did see reports -- whether they're true or not -- Government
-
- reports about aliens.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- What were the reports?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- There were photographs of aliens. There were autopsy reports.
-
- There was really a wealth of information.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- What did they look like?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The typical "grey." I hate to say that, like anyone knows what a
-
- typical grey is. It's a creature, probably three and a half to
-
- four feet tall, a large hairless head, black, slanted eyes, long
-
- arms, very thin-looking. I don't know how else I would describe
-
- them.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- What does an autopsy report look like? What's included in an
-
- autopsy report that you said you read?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The reason I call it an autopsy report is I saw the carcass -- it
-
- was obviously a dead alien -- carcass cut up and it was all dark
-
- inside like it had an iron base. The reason I say iron is
-
- because it was very dark blood or whatever. I'm not a doctor,
-
- but it seemed to be one large organ in the body as opposed to
-
- identifiable heart and lungs and that sort of thing, but just one
-
- gooey mess in it.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- What did the report say? It had pictures; it had to have some
-
- words: "Here's Exhibit A, an alien"?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Essentially so! They had weights and densities of the organs,
-
- said there were no conclusions drawn, but it was just a basic
-
- description of what the person who was cutting open the body saw.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Say where they came from?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, in one of the reports it said they came from Reticulum 4,
-
- was what it said.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Where is that? Any idea?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- [Lazar laughs.]
-
- Well, I'm told it's a star system in Zeta Reticuli. Reticulum is
-
- the constellation.
-
-
-
- And by "Reticulum 4," they meant the fourth planet out from that
-
- sun.
-
-
-
- In the same reports, we were identified -- instead of saying
-
- Earth, we were identified as "Sol 3," meaning the third planet
-
- out from our sun.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Now you've read a lot of UFO material. Do you find yourself
-
- mixing what you've read and what you've learned from up there?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, that's why I stay away from the UFO researchers and things
-
- like that. I really don't want to be associated with that. I
-
- don't research the stuff. It's interesting to read, but no, I'm
-
- not mixing anything that I've read into this stuff.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- We were just talking about the UFO field in general, and you feel
-
- a little reluctant to get mixed up in it, although you ARE right
-
- now.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Unfortunately, yeah.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Why the reluctance?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I don't know. There are so MANY stories circulating around.
-
- Everyone has their own view. Each UFO researcher says they have
-
- the right story. And essentially, I don't want to side with
-
- anyone because I don't know where that information's come from,
-
- though they do all have the basic story: you know, there ARE
-
- alien crafts here; how they got here is, probably aliens brought
-
- them here, unless we really have a neat setup with the UPS.
-
-
-
- There's just so many different factions of them [UFO
-
- researchers], and they all kind of war between each other; I
-
- really don't want to get associated with them.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Before you got into the program at S-4, though, you had an
-
- interest in UFOs. It must be hard for people to swallow that
-
- here's a guy who has an interest in it and he gets hired into the
-
- program.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Well, there was a very brief time there I had sent out resumes to
-
- several places, and I wanted to get back into the scientific
-
- field again. Almost simultaneously, I met John Lear and read
-
- some of his material. And initially, I thought he was just
-
- absolutely crazy. But apparently, he did have a good source of
-
- information because, as it turns out, some of the information
-
- that he had I actually had hands-on experience with.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- But your regard for UFOs in general: As a scientist, did you
-
- think there was something to it?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Absolutely not.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Absolutely nothing?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No. I would have stood on that 'til the day I died.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Many of the people who have been calling are UFO groups or UFO
-
- researchers who have demanded that you talk to them: We've got
-
- to talk to this guy; we want to give him a lot more publicity so
-
- he stays alive; we want him to give us information so that we can
-
- further check out his background, etc.; we want to protect him;
-
- we want to help him.
-
-
-
- You've resisted. You've done this program; you've done a couple
-
- of reports with us; and you've done a radio show or two; in
-
- general, you've resisted going into the UFO circuit. Why is
-
- that?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Just like I mentioned before: I just don't want to be associated
-
- with those guys.
-
-
-
- And how many people are you going to open up your background to
-
- and let them run rampant through it? I mean, private detectives,
-
- every UFO group in the world wants to do that! The idea was for
-
- me to release the information, essentially to protect myself and
-
- take some of the heat off. And I've done that. And that's all
-
- that needs to be done, really.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Certain UFO researchers claim they've been getting information
-
- from you all along; you've been leaking stuff to them; and that
-
- they've read these reports that verify the information. You've
-
- been working with UFO groups while you were in the program at S-
-
- 4?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Not UFO groups. I did mention a couple of things to some people.
-
- That's all I'm gonna say.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Okay. In essence, were you breaking your vows that you made to
-
- the Government?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- And why did you feel that was necessary? I mean, you took an
-
- oath, didn't you?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah. But look at the magnitude of what was going on. I believe
-
- that some of the technology -- maybe all of the technology --
-
- should be kept secret, until we have a handle on everything. But
-
- certainly, the overview of what happened just cannot be a secret
-
- from anyone -- not just the American people, but the rest of the
-
- world.
-
-
-
- Let out the basic fact that we have these craft, at one time
-
- aliens did at least visit and drop off something, however they
-
- got here, that there was some contact made, and then cut it
-
- short. You don't need to release the information on the gravity
-
- generators, the weapon potential -- which is enormous -- and so
-
- on.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- What could you do with that technology? Say you took the flying
-
- disks, the anti-matter reactors, the gravity generators, gave it
-
- to Los Alamos or Livermore, let them examine the potential
-
- abilities of this stuff. I mean, how would this affect life on
-
- earth if this stuff was widely available?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- And mass-producable?
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Yes.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That's tough to say. I mean, you have a completely different
-
- mode of travel. What happens when you can play with time? That
-
- gets into a really deep philosophical question there.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- But I mean, it would change a lot of stuff, change everything.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh yeah! It would change absolutely everything!
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- Do you think it will ever come out?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Personally, no.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- What do you hope happens, both with yourself and with this
-
- information?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- There's been enough thorns put in their toes to where they do try
-
- and release something.
-
-
-
- Knapp:
-
- We'll have to have you come back, Bob. Thanks for joining us.
-
-
-
-