home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1980-01-09 | 36.5 KB | 2,291 lines |
-
-
- ========================================================
-
- (C) Copyright 1989 ParaNet Information Service
-
- All Rights Reserved unless copyrighted by Author.
-
- ========================================================
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Robert Lazar/Billy Goodman, KVEG-AM Radio 840
-
- Based on its original three-hour, 11/21/89 broadcast, the
-
- following is KVEG's one-hour version, played at midnight 12/31/89
-
- and at midnight
-
- 12/7/90:
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- You came on the CBS affiliate here in Las Vegas, Channel 8,
-
- saying there are flying saucers not too far from here. I don't
-
- want to say Area 51, right?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right. It's Area S-4. A lot of people get that confused. It's
-
- about 10 miles south of Area 51, of Groom Lake, which is Area 51.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- When people try to get down that dirt road, they get stopped by
-
- cars and everything. What are they protecting there?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh, Groom Lake -- that's Area 51.
-
-
-
- A lot of projects are going on at Groom Lake -- Area 51:
-
- Aurora -- a high-altitude, reconnaissance aircraft designed to
-
- replace the SR-71, some Star Wars research --
-
-
-
- But there aren't and never has been any flying saucers at Area 51
-
- at Groom Lake.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- You have been at Area 51, so you can say that unequivocally,
-
- right?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh yeah.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Did you spend most of your time at S-4?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Groom Lake/Area 51 has a runway there, so if you want to go out
-
- to that part of the Test Site, you fly in and land at Groom Lake
-
- and then you take a bus south to Area S-4.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Have you actually landed on that airstrip at Groom Lake?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, every time I went out there I HAD to land there.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- How often would you go out there?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It wasn't on a regular basis. They called me up and said, well,
-
- Thursday by 4:45, be at such and such a place and get on this
-
- plane, and, you know, you'll be out there. I hadn't worked into
-
- a regular schedule yet.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- You're sitting at home and they say, you will be at a certain
-
- place at a certain time, or you will arrive there? How do you
-
- make sure you can make connections to get there at 4:45? Do they
-
- take care of all that for you too?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, I just have to show up there. If I can't make it, I just
-
- have to tell them or call them with sufficient notice.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- But they want you there for a specific reason because --
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- -- well, to get on a specific flight.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- And they want you there at Groom Lake so you can get to S-4.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- When you get there, what are they usually looking for you to do?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That varied. Mainly educating me, catching me up to where
-
- everyone else was.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Grooming you.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- And what were they grooming you for, Bob?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I dealt with mainly the propulsion of the extraterrestrial craft.
-
- There was a lot of material to read, a lot of briefings, a lot of
-
- research that had been done for quite some time that I had to
-
- catch up on before I could really get into it myself. So most of
-
- the time I spent reading and going over some things.
-
-
-
- There was some hands-on experience with some of the equipment
-
- from the discs and things of that sort.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Let's bring you back to the beginning. You're a young man, let's
-
- face it, you're a young man. What was your first reaction the
-
- first time you knew for a fact that we had flying saucers in our
-
- possession? You saw them with your own eyes. What was your
-
- first reaction to this?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh, it was exciting! What else can you say? It was really neat.
-
- The first time I saw it and I walked in and actually saw the
-
- disc, of course I couldn't say whether or not it was an alien
-
- device or just an interesting craft that we've been developing.
-
- So it was a little while before I had ascertained that it was an
-
- extraterrestrial craft.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Did they ever explain to you how it got there?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, that I was never told. But they just took things very
-
- slowly. First I was exposed to the craft, and then I began to
-
- read the briefings. And they were monitoring me through the
-
- whole time, so they let me take things one step at a time, as
-
- they do for everyone that works there.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- You got to be honest with me. Here you are a young man. You
-
- left there and you went home to the wife, to your neighborhood,
-
- sitting around having a cup of coffee. Did you ever say, hey
-
- man, you won't believe this, there are flying saucers!
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh, I stuck with "the program" for a little while.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Well, what was "the program": Don't tell anybody?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh, most certainly.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Being inquisitive, I'm sure, as a young man, did you ever say,
-
- why is it that we can't tell anybody?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, because being involved with many other classified projects at
-
- the other labs that I worked with, you don't ask that. You just
-
- assume that they know what they're doing. You're privileged to
-
- be in that project, so --
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- So you just felt honored being there.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Exactly.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- And you'd get home and sit there with the wife at the dinner
-
- table and not even talk about it?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Well, that didn't last for too long.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- I can imagine, I mean: "How was your day today, dear? Anything
-
- exciting happen?" What would you say?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Not a whole lot. It caused a lot of friction, a tremendous
-
- amount.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Because you couldn't speak up -- you couldn't talk about what was
-
- going on.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Is your title "scientist"?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Physicist, but scientist is a good all-around description.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- As far as you're concerned, there is no extraterrestrial activity
-
- up at Area 51 or Groom Lake. Has that always been the case?
-
- Because I heard, and I also read government papers -- maybe they
-
- lied -- but they said that Area 51 was the area where the U-2
-
- came out of.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That's where the U-2 came out of, where the SR-71 came out of.
-
- Lots of things came out of there.
-
-
-
- Maybe a disk went THROUGH there. But they're just not stored and
-
- developed/worked on there. Sure, one may have rolled by there
-
- and someone may have -- There have been lots of reports of people
-
- at Area 51 who have said, at one time I saw a disk in a hangar.
-
- That may have happened, but it wasn't there permanently.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- We took a group of people up there, about 200. And I was up
-
- there with them. I sat in the desert and I watched.
-
-
-
- And here's how I could describe it. Picture the 29-1/2-mile
-
- Marker, and we're leaking out at these peaks. All of a sudden
-
- over the peak something comes up. It appears over the peak.
-
- It's just a light. And you watch this light and you see it doing
-
- ZIGZAGS!
-
-
-
- Something's happened out there! Planes that we have that do
-
- those kind of maneuvers?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Well, without seeing it, I can't say. But I know when the tests
-
- are.
-
-
-
- Zelly:
-
- I watched you on the Channel 8 program, and my dog was barking
-
- when you were explaining the gravity theory.
-
-
-
- These craft don't use any type of gasoline, is that right?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Any type of GASOLINE?
-
-
-
- Zelly:
-
- Yeah.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, they don't.
-
-
-
- Zelly:
-
- Okay, how do they get from A to B?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- They bend space and time, using gravity.
-
-
-
- Zelly:
-
- Can you explain that to a layman like me in as simple terms as
-
- possible?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I can give a fairly accurate description. I haven't given this
-
- before, but I think this is the best one.
-
-
-
- The crafts have three gravity amplifiers on the bottom of them.
-
- What they do, assuming that they're in space; it's just easier to
-
- get this across that way:
-
-
-
- They will focus the three gravity amplifiers on the point they
-
- want to go to.
-
-
-
- Now to give an analogy, take a thin rubber sheet, lay it on a
-
- table, and put thumbtacks in each corner. Take a big stone, set
-
- it on one end of the rubber sheet, and say that's your UFO or
-
- spacecraft.
-
-
-
- Pick out a point you want to go to -- which could be anywhere on
-
- the rubber sheet -- pinch that point with your fingers, and pull
-
- that all the way up to the craft. That's how it focuses and
-
- pulls that point actually TO it.
-
-
-
- When you then shut off the gravity generators, the stone or your
-
- spacecraft follows that stretched rubber back to its point.
-
- There's no linear travel through space; it actually bends space
-
- and time and follows space as it retracts.
-
-
-
- Zelly:
-
- Is there a box on the craft that does this gravity focusing?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It's a complete system; it's not a single little box.
-
-
-
- Zelly:
-
- That's so hard to understand. Did you understand this easily?
-
- Did you comprehend this over months or years?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, it didn't really take very long. The concept is difficult to
-
- grasp.
-
-
-
- Jeff from Canyon Lake, CA:
-
- Last Saturday night my cousin and I were out at Groom Lake, and
-
- we saw from the peak that I think you were describing, Billy, a
-
- very similar experience. We saw the lights originally over the
-
- top of the mountains and streak out to about a half a mile away
-
- from us and then just vanished. It lasted for seven to ten
-
- seconds. Then my cousin saw another sighting off to the south
-
- where your guest described the site.
-
-
-
- What was weird -- I got out the camera and was just about ready
-
- to take a picture and it vanished from the center out! It became
-
- transparent and all of a sudden it was gone. It was like nothing
-
- that I've ever seen before. What could it have been?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Without seeing it, I really can't say.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- There is a theory that they can dematerialize or all of a sudden
-
- be so quick to get away from you that you lose sight of it
-
- instantly. Is that true?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- You can lose sight of it without it even moving because -- just
-
- in view of the way things work -- when they warp time and space
-
- around the craft, they can actually --
-
-
-
- This is the exact reason you can see stars behind the sun,
-
- because the sun has an intense gravitational field and it pulls
-
- space AROUND where you can begin to see the star behind it. It's
-
- just like in a disk: You can be looking straight up at it, and
-
- if the gravity generators are in the proper configuration, you'll
-
- just see the sky above it; you won't see the craft there. That's
-
- how there can be a group of people, and some people can be right
-
- under it and see it, and there can be people 100 feet off to the
-
- left and not see it. It just depends how the field is bent.
-
-
-
- It's also the reason why the crafts APPEAR as if they're making
-
- ninety-degree turns at some incredible speed; it's just the time
-
- and space distortion you're seeing; you're not seeing the actual
-
- event happening.
-
-
-
- Roger Number Two:
-
- Have you seen any aliens there?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- You know, I really don't want to talk about aliens at S-4. It's
-
- just a weird topic.
-
-
-
- Roger:
-
- Three days ago on the Billy Goodman Happening, a worker at
-
- Mercury came on. Did you hear that show?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No.
-
-
-
- Roger:
-
- He went 3,000 feet underground, and when the elevator opened it
-
- was a stainless steel atmosphere. He's a worker laying electric
-
- wiring and lighting for this vast complex at Mercury. And he's
-
- been working there quite awhile.
-
-
-
- He told of the Marines down there with fixed bayonets that herded
-
- them into certain areas, took them out of other areas. And one
-
- day, he saw some doctors there with white coats -- smocks -- and
-
- they were wheeling along on gurneys some aliens with big heads,
-
- small bodies, arms, and so forth.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- This is in Mercury?
-
-
-
- Roger:
-
- Yes.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That's a strange place for that to occur, though I have heard but
-
- do not have first-hand experience of any tunnels and things down
-
- there. Certainly, they have very deep tunnels and rooms under
-
- there for the nuclear tests. I don't know if they go down to
-
- 3,000 feet, though I think someone was just recently killed at
-
- 1,500 feet underground -- that was in the paper, so everyone
-
- knows they at least go down THAT deep.
-
-
-
- Roger:
-
- The information I have is that most of the underground areas are
-
- about 1,000 meters.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I really don't know how far they go down THERE. The thing that
-
- strikes me as unusual is you said there is a stainless steel
-
- atmosphere?
-
-
-
- Roger:
-
- Yes. That's the way he described it. They were putting up
-
- sheets of stainless steel because apparently they drilled with
-
- some kind of machine in this vast complex underground in the
-
- tunnels, and they had to put something to COVER that.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I understand what you're talking about now. In fact, I happen to
-
- know of somebody that drills those tunnels down there.
-
-
-
- Roger:
-
- Are they the type that go through and push the top off the earth
-
- to the SIDE and have square corners to compact it, leaving no
-
- residue?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I really don't remember how the person described it to me. I
-
- think it's a 24-foot-diameter drill that is driven, and it's
-
- hydraulically operated, and they just DRIVE the thing.
-
-
-
- Roger:
-
- But it must not leave any residue then.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Probably not. Either that or it channels it out backwards and is
-
- somehow relayed out of the hole.
-
-
-
- Guardian Angel:
-
- Does Bob feel secure after he's left this out. I pray no one has
-
- made any attempt on you at all?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Well, they made attempts on me before, but not since. And as far
-
- as feeling secure, no, I don't. I'm really waiting for the
-
- repercussions.
-
-
-
- Guardian:
-
- I wish you would really stay close to the show with Billy. I
-
- think we would enjoy talking and asking questions of you. And
-
- you'd better believe that they would have to answer to us if all
-
- of a sudden you would come up [wrong.]
-
-
-
- You said Wednesday nights are normally when these saucers are
-
- seen.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right.
-
-
-
- Guardian:
-
- Can I ask you what your clearance was out there at S-4?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I'd rather not say because the name is --
-
- It's 38 levels above Q-Clearance, which is the highest civilian
-
- clearance; it is SUPPOSED to be the highest civilian clearance.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- It starts at Q and goes from there -- one, two, three? Is that
-
- how it works?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I don't know what the intermediate levels are.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- You don't know if there are 37 others; it's just the number they
-
- gave you; is that correct?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, there ARE 37 others.
-
-
-
- Kevin:
-
- I was interested in the condition and shape of the disk that he
-
- claims he saw up at Area S-4 on the Range.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The condition and shape? The condition seemed new, as I said on
-
- the TV program. It seemed almost brand new, like I said, if I
-
- know what a new flying saucer looks like. As far as the shape,
-
- have you ever seen any of the Billy Meiers photographs?
-
-
-
- Kevin:
-
- I've seen a couple, yes.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- There's one that it bears a striking resemblance to. It's one --
-
- I coined the term the Sport Model. It doesn't have any weird
-
- protrusions; it's a slim, thin disk with ridges in it, and it
-
- bears an incredible resemblance to that; and I tend to think that
-
- it IS that disk.
-
-
-
- Kevin:
-
- Approximate dimensions?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Approximately 30-35 feet by 15 feet tall.
-
-
-
- Kevin:
-
- How close were you allowed to be?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I stood inside the doorway.
-
-
-
- Kevin:
-
- Were you able to determine what the metallic makeup was?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Did you touch it at any time?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh yeah.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- What does it feel like?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It feels like ordinary metal.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Like aluminum?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Can you feel the difference between steel and aluminum?
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Steel is colder than aluminum, I understand, to the feel.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I'm not a metallurgist.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Reports say there's a very thin feel to it.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I didn't feel the thickness of it; I felt the outside. It could
-
- be a micron thick or a foot thick; I wouldn't know.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- You say you never saw the metal itself off to the side.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Not pieces of it, just the disk itself.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- What was the disk doing?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Sitting there.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- How was it sitting there? On the bottom?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, it was on tripod legs; they were actually resting on the
-
- bottom of the disk.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Were there people milling around it?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Not at the time I walked up to it, no. There were people in the
-
- area, yeah.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Is that the only one you ever saw?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, I saw the other ones but at a great distance.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- What were THEY doing?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- They were just parked in the hangars.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Like an airplane.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Essentially.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- You never saw them land or take off?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, never. I don't even know if they were operational.
-
-
-
- Deadhead Dean:
-
- I took a class in quantum physics.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That's a fun class, wasn't it?
-
-
-
- Dean:
-
- Yeah, it was for me. But we studied a lot about gravity. We
-
- studied about gravitons.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- The theory of gravitons is wrong. But physics has always done
-
- that: Where there's a question, they create a particle. You
-
- must know what I'm talking about -- photons and things like that.
-
-
-
- Dean:
-
- Have you found anything that confirms the existence of gravitons?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No. Everything denied the existence of gravitons. Gravity is a
-
- WAVE, and there are actually two waves that are misconstrued as
-
- one force. And they're called Gravity A and B.
-
-
-
- Dean:
-
- What's you general attitude about quantum physics and the quantum
-
- theory?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That can last all night. If you want to talk to me privately
-
- about that, I'd be happy to talk to you.
-
-
-
- Dean:
-
- I'm interested in how it connects with the Grand Unified Field
-
- Theory. We were told that if we could confirm the existence of
-
- some of these quantum particles, we could fit in --
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right. I don't want to say my number over the air; that would be
-
- a disaster. You could write in care of the station, and Billy
-
- could get it to me and I could write back to you. The Unified
-
- Field Theory is a lot more simple; they say the BEAUTIFUL theory
-
- will be the Unified Field Theory; it is a lot simpler than
-
- physics is after right now.
-
-
-
- Dean:
-
- On the KLAS show you said the extraterrestrial crafts you saw
-
- were from another solar system completely. Do you believe that
-
- because you know where they are from or because you just ruled
-
- out any of the other planets in the solar system as habitable?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, that's because I know where they're from.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Where are you actually working right now, Bob?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I have my own company; I work for myself.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Are you inventing things? What do you do?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I'd rather not say.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- That's your privilege, sir. I just thought I'd give you a plug,
-
- if it's a business.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I still conduct business with the Government in a technical
-
- aspect.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- A consultant-type thing maybe?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- You could say that.
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- Does "M42" mean anything to you?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Not of the top of my head.
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- Okay, very good.
-
- How do you rate Hawkings?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Stephen Hawkings? There's a lot I could say about him. A lot of
-
- the basic theory is incorrect. But he's a very thorough guy.
-
- Have you read his book?
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- Yes I have. I'm an experimental researcher.
-
-
-
- You're a physicist. Now, how far back do you go as far as
-
- traveling backwards through time? Can you go to the Big Bang
-
- theory and then subscribe to it?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I'll go with the Big Bang theory, but there are so many other
-
- variables, so many other things really could have happened,
-
- that's more of a cosmology viewpoint. I'm concerned mainly with
-
- particle physics, high-energy physics, and that sort of thing.
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- Isn't that where it all began?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah it is. But when you're talking on a macro scale like that,
-
- you're sliding out of my field of expertise. I do subscribe to
-
- the Big Bang theory; there WAS a big bang. Where the initial
-
- particle came from -- there's a great debate about that.
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- Could you give me an estimate where they're getting creation
-
- versus evolution? Was the big bang a part of evolution or was it
-
- a part of creation? And was there a creation or an evolution
-
- before that?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Well, that's a chicken or the egg question, to me. I would say
-
- that the big bang was followed by a natural evolution, though I
-
- don't think things just evolved to where everything is now
-
- without interaction.
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- Very good. I guess I'm going back too far. You seem to be a
-
- real logical scientist; you don't want to go out on a limb with
-
- theories; you want to stick to facts.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I'd really rather do that.
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- And that's very good.
-
- And what IS the fact? How far can you really trace us back, to
-
- absolutes, where you drop off from absolutes into your theories?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Probably from the instant of detonation of the big bang.
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- That's microseconds, right?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I'd say even before that.
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- Okay, very good.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It might go into --
-
-
-
- ETC:
-
- Do you feel the new telescopes coming up into space will help
-
- solve that mystery?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh yeah. It will certainly pose a lot more questions though.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- What is this Big Bang theory?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- How the universe was initiated. I think the way that was
-
- detected was, someone looked and just happened to notice that all
-
- the galaxies were moving AWAY from a certain point at certain
-
- speeds. And they did a computer analysis and, I'm not really
-
- sure how this progressed, but they were able to reverse the
-
- directions and everything came to a single point. And they
-
- assumed that there was at one time an unbelievable massive
-
- particle that exploded.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Like a meteorite-type thing? Bigger than that?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Actually smaller than that. It gets really crazy.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- But this thing that did explode . . .
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right, there was a tremendous explosion. It threw EVERYTHING
-
- out; gases and things condensed into matter and essentially
-
- formed the universe: that's the Big Bang theory.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- How many flying saucers have you seen?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Nine.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- And you know for a fact they did not come from here, right? Or
-
- where do you think they came from originally?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I didn't see them delivered. My best guesstimation is that they
-
- came from another, well, another world.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- And when they are flown in this S-4 area, are they flown by
-
- aliens or by military pilots?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- They're either flown by remote control or flown by military
-
- pilots. I say either remote control or people because I did not
-
- actually see who got into the disk.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Did it look like there was a lot of room in the disk? How large
-
- were these things?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, there's not that much room inside.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- You'd have to be small, I would imagine.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right.
-
-
-
- Space Case:
-
- I heard John Lear talking about drugs and hypnosis being used on
-
- individuals that are working with the ET project. Do you confirm
-
- that?
-
-
-
- Also, when the guys were at the Red Rock area or wherever the
-
- vortex is at Blue Point, someone said they had a scar on their
-
- shoulder or arm after the encounter. John mentioned that anyone
-
- who was involved or abducted, drugs and hypnosis were used on
-
- him. Do you know anything about that? Is it possible that group
-
- could have been abducted by people involved with the project, why
-
- they lost time, and why some of them had scars, like maybe there
-
- was a hyper- or gravity or something like that?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I have no information on abductions.
-
-
-
- The drugs and hypnosis: Now, I found out about this -- though
-
- supposedly this happened to me -- I found out about this through
-
- regressive hynosis. I had vivid memory of everything, but there
-
- were a couple of days that I only remembered going out on a plane
-
- and coming back on a plane, and I thought it was really strange.
-
-
-
- I decided to try a clinical hypnotist. His name is Layne Keck at
-
- Serenus Clinic here in Las Vegas. He had no idea what we were
-
- talking about -- anything to do with UFOs. I wanted to go with
-
- someone that was completely unbiased.
-
-
-
- And I just stepped back under hypnosis ENTIRE DAYS so I could
-
- read -- re-read the reports and things and get things a little
-
- clearer.
-
-
-
- And there was just an INTENSE drilling period of rhythmic yells
-
- in a room with some guys continuously threatening me. I said --
-
- under hypnosis -- I was drinking something that smelled like
-
- pine, which even sounds strange to me, but I heard myself on
-
- tape, and as I describe this -- I'm not that familiar with
-
- hypnosis -- but Layne said it's similar to something the military
-
- uses called "The Orion Method," some sort of regimented hypnosis.
-
-
-
- Space Case:
-
- John said that's why most of this stuff there is kept secret,
-
- because the people that work there -- when they first go up there
-
- -- are indoctrinated with the drugs and the hypnosis.
-
-
-
- And then when they leave the site or wherever they're working on
-
- this stuff, they go back to their normal way of living and have
-
- no memory of it.
-
-
-
- Then when they come back into the security, they walk through a
-
- room or something triggers them into a trance or regimen again.
-
- And then they work under hypnosis having no memory.
-
-
-
- Then when they come back into the real world, they forget again.
-
-
-
- And that's why these people can go on these missions and go down
-
- to Africa and pick up these saucers, nobody having any record or
-
- memory of it at all. Does that make sense to you at all?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That sounds cool, but I don't know. I can't confirm or deny
-
- that.
-
-
-
- Obviously, something is done, something WAS done in the area of
-
- hynosis to me, and I'm sure, other people that work there. But
-
- whether they can turn you on or off, I really don't know. Maybe
-
- they can do that. It sounds even far-fetched to me, but I really
-
- don't know.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- You don't think it's possible that as you arrive in the morning,
-
- the effects have worn off, and you get in there and you do your
-
- job.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I can't say anything is impossible anymore because I keep finding
-
- out different. Sure that's possible. But I'm a nuts-and-bolts
-
- guy and I can't say, as a matter of fact that is true and that's
-
- false. I don't know.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- But there must be some power that they have over everybody, Bob,
-
- that they leave there everyday, go back to their families;
-
- something has to occur.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, but how come I had total memory of most of the stuff I was
-
- involved in then?
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- I'm not saying you, per se. I'm saying other people up there.
-
- There must be something where they have a way of controlling
-
- them, so that when they leave there they forget or they just go
-
- into something else.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right. I have a hard time believing everyone can adhere to "the
-
- program." I mean, how strong can you possibly be? Yeah, there
-
- must be a way. It can't be just threats.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- Are you familiar with the latest scientific evidence: Right in
-
- the center of our Milky Way galaxy there's a black hole --
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Black hole, yeah. That's not very late; they theorized that
-
- awhile ago. As a matter of fact, it's now thought that in the
-
- center of EVERY galaxy there's a black hole.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- How sure are they that they have one in ours?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I really don't know.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- You said you stepped in the doorway of the spaceship. Did you
-
- actually step onto the spaceship?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yes.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- Did it make a sound when you stepped on it?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- What color was the inside interior?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- It was all the same color as the outside -- just a dull aluminum
-
- finish, is the best way I can describe it.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- When you worked for this agency, what method did they use to pay
-
- you? Did they send you a check every two weeks, or what?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Checks, yeah.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- Do you have the check stubs?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I don't want to talk about that right now.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- But you got paid by check?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- You said the way the aliens travel in the spaceships they
-
- generate the gravity, and it pulls one side of the universe
-
- towards it --
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah, I wouldn't go as far as the universe, but a great distance
-
- toward it, yeah. They can't exert a gravitational field
-
- throughout the universe -- just some limited distance -- I don't
-
- know what it is.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- But do they do it toward the Earth?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, toward the craft, wherever the craft is.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- When they want to go to Earth, they aim it toward the Earth?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Right.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- Do you think this is the reason why I occasionally feel dizzy?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I doubt it.
-
-
-
- Tim:
-
- If you built a spaceship that travels at the speed of light and
-
- you turn on the headlights, what would happen?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Exactly what would happen if you had a spacecraft, for instance,
-
- traveling at the speed of light and you were sitting on the front
-
- of it and you fired a bullet that also moved at the speed of
-
- light. People ask, how fast does that bullet move in relation to
-
- a stationary object? And the layman would say, twice the speed
-
- of light. But no, nothing ever exceeds the speed of light
-
- because mass increases and so on and so forth.
-
-
-
- But if you're a spacecraft, of course it can travel AT the speed
-
- of light, but if it APPROACHES it, can you turn your headlights
-
- on? They don't do very much good.
-
-
-
- Chris:
-
- I theorized that gravity transcends conventional space-time, and
-
- that a massive object at one end of the universe is attracting
-
- instantaneously objects at other parts of the universe --
-
- extremely subtle effect, obviously, how many angels on the head
-
- of a needle.
-
-
-
- And I have one question about Fleischman and Pons.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- That's an interesting group.
-
-
-
- Gravity propagates instantly, by the way.
-
-
-
- Chris:
-
- I've been interested in theoretical physics for the last 20
-
- years; I've driven myself crazy. And I disagree with Steven
-
- Hawkings too.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I don't want to shoot down Steven Hawkings; he's a brilliant man.
-
- There are some basic physics that are wrong.
-
-
-
- Chris:
-
- Could you comment on Fleischman and Pons? I maintain that they
-
- are correct and that this hass been covered up by the oil
-
- companies.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I don't agree with that.
-
-
-
- Chris:
-
- In the fusion method that they're using, obviously we don't have
-
- a football-sized-field machine creating their fusion, so electro-
-
- chemical-reaction fusion seems to me very plausible, rather than
-
- inertial magnetic confinement.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Inertial magnetic confinement is garbage, and so is laser fusion.
-
- It's ridiculous.
-
-
-
- Laser fusion is totally stupid. The concept is there, but the
-
- materials aren't, and to start a laser reaction the lasers have
-
- to fire MANY times a minute. We can initiate a reaction -- I
-
- think our best laser is Shiva [sp] down at Livermore. I think
-
- that has to cool down for several hours. It's a tremendous waste
-
- of money.
-
-
-
- Dennis in L.A.:
-
- I'm a member of the Operating Engineers, Local 12. I work in the
-
- Los Angeles area. Is Reynolds Electric part of that base out
-
- there?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, Reynolds is not out there, and neither is any other
-
- subcontractor -- Reynolds, EG&G --
-
-
-
- Dennis:
-
- Are they up in Tonopah?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Reynolds is at the Test Site proper, the nuclear test site. I'm
-
- not that familiar. The highest clearance they can attain is Q,
-
- through REECO and EG&G and those guys. So the closest they get
-
- is down to Area 51 and roam around there.
-
-
-
- Gary:
-
- You said you came public with this information to protect
-
- yourself.
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Yeah.
-
-
-
- Gary:
-
- How serious is this? What length will the Government go to
-
- conceal this?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- Oh man, you must be kidding! Everything possible! I can't even
-
- describe it. Any length at all. I don't even know what to say
-
- to answer that.
-
-
-
- Gary:
-
- What's on your horizon now, as far as the Government's concerned?
-
- Aren't they gonna want to talk to you?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I think that would be a really strange thing for them to do. Any
-
- action on their part right now would guarantee what I'm saying is
-
- true. So I think now it's going to be a hands-off policy, which
-
- is just absolutely fine with me. That's the only thing I wanted.
-
-
-
- It's only been a week since anything has gone on. In fact,
-
- someone said, if they're following me now, it's to make sure
-
- nothing happens to me.
-
-
-
- Gary:
-
- I heard you speak of Blue Diamond before. What's going on there?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- I love this subject! That's where the "vortex" is. There is no
-
- vortex. Blue Diamond is a place where people gather to look at
-
- supposedly an entry-way for flying saucers. They don't enter
-
- through that. If you want to see a vortex, I suggest you flush
-
- your toilet and look inside.
-
-
-
- There's a gravity anomaly there -- a slight difference in
-
- gravity, the gravitational wave there -- but those are all over
-
- the place. It has nothing with anything.
-
-
-
- Goodman:
-
- Is it because you know the past record of the Government, how
-
- they react to situations? If someone becomes more public, they
-
- tend not to do something that would cause them problems?
-
-
-
- Lazar:
-
- No, I don't know that for a fact. I'm just HOPING that.
-
-
-
- Gene Huff (in studio with Lazar):
-
- Billy, I think there's a minor misunderstanding here. I think
-
- people have gotten the impression that he was in "the program,"
-
- actively in there and for some reason he decided he was in
-
- trouble and just decided to get out.
-
-
-
- All of this stems from them beginning not --
-
- Again, he just went out there on a periodic basis -- more or less
-
- on call. And after he got caught out there showing John Lear,
-
- myself, and the other people the flying saucer tests, after that
-
- they debriefed him, and after that they continued to monitor his
-
- phone. His phone was tapped. And what they wanted to stop --
-
- and why he thinks they might do something -- is, they THREATENED
-
- him. And they called him on the phone and threatened him because
-
- they were monitoring basically his plan for the exposure of this.
-
-
-
- And that's what they wanted to stop. In fact, we've got the word
-
- through the grapevine that they're amazed; they don't know what
-
- to do because they've never had someone that used drugs, used
-
- hypnosis, drilled in their head not to come forward with this,
-
- and they can't believe that a guy actually went on television.
-
- And they're really at a loss for what to do.
-
-