Major Ed Dames warns of a 2005 "kill shot" sequence—triggered by a space shuttle grounded by meteors—leading to solar flares, 300 mph winds, and Earth’s 12-degree axial wobble, causing tsunamis and mass dehydration. His $20M-funded remote viewing team confirms 100% likelihood of this discontinuity, though he avoids regional details to prevent misguided survival actions. Shifting focus from prediction to problem-solving, Dames links the event to Hopi prophecies and solar cycles, while Bell promotes workshops and survival prep amid skepticism about celestial timelines. The urgency overshadows terrorism, climate change, and even mercury cover-ups, leaving humanity with a stark choice: brace for inevitable collapse or act before the "cleansing" arrives. [Automatically generated summary]
From the high desert in the great American Southwest, I bid you all good evening, good morning, good afternoon, wherever you may be in the cosmos along all these time zones.
Every one of which is covered one way or the other by this program, Coast to Coast AM I'm Art Bell of the Weekend, and I am honored to be with you.
It really is an honor.
unidentified
And not so much that I'm gonna kind of get off my chest.
Um a lot of static on the handbands tonight across America from Arizona south of the border on through the entire one-half of the U.S. Some pretty violent thunderstorms raging their way across the U.S. border, so there's a lot going on there tonight.
And speaking of static, a couple of people I want to thank profusely.
The radios that I use are made by a company called ICOM, and they've got headquarters up in Washington, and there's a technician up there who has been really, really good to me through the static discharge problem.
His name is Bruce Weber.
Yo, Bruce, thank you so very much.
You and your company have provided this wonderful support for the radios that you sell.
So thanks.
That's personal thanks.
And also Industrial Communications Engineers Limited, who constructed a very special arrester for me, actually designed and produced it and sent it to me in order to try and rein in the out-of-control voltage on my antenna so I'm protected six ways from Sunday.
But again, to both of you, thank you very much for all the help.
It's going to be a really good night.
We've got Ed Dames coming in the next hour, and a lot of what Ed has had to say has now started to pan out.
None of it very good either.
We'll get to all of that.
President Bush was told more than a month now, they say, before September 11th, that Al-Qaeda had reached American shores, that they had a support system in place for its operatives, and that the FBI had, in fact, detected suspicious activity that might involve a hijacking plot.
Now, to be fair to the president, and I really do think we need to be fair, I don't think there's any indication, or I haven't seen any, that they really knew what was going to happen.
I just, I haven't seen that.
So I don't think they saw it coming.
They saw trouble coming, clearly, but from what I've observed in the 9-11 hearing so far, they would not have known that that kind of air attack was going to occur.
Hundreds of reinforcements joined fellow Marines besieging Aflujah on Saturday in Iraq, and the U.S. military said it would move to take the city if ceasefire talks fail.
Now, this whole thing in Iraq over the last week is incredible.
I mean, I saw on CNN a story in which, you remember when the statue of Saddam Hussein was torn down?
Remember that?
Big press moment and sort of the symbol, you know, of the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime.
You know, the big symbol.
I mean, that was it, the video symbol.
They played it again and again and again.
What they finally determined was that the crowd, while we thought they were shouting in support of America and shouting in support of the sudden freedom they had and all the rest of it, well, somewhere, but most of them were actually shouting the name of a cleric.
That's what they found out.
They went back and looked at the film, and it was determined that crowd really was shouting the name of a cleric.
One of the clerics that now is, well, I don't know, it's the second or I guess it'd be the third war, right, with Iraq.
But, you know, they have arisen, and now we're fighting a fairly serious war there.
I was not in favor of attacking Iraq before we did.
Very much spoke out against it.
I'm sure many of you will recall.
But now we are there, and now we must win.
And it looks like we've got more of a job on our hands than we originally thought we might.
Insurgents who kidnapped an American civilian threatened in a videotaped release Saturday to kill and mutilate him unless U.S. forces withdraw from the city of Fallujah.
Very unlikely, I would say.
We're not going to withdraw.
We're there and now we have to win.
We have to figure out how to win.
And that's no small matter.
A man I very much respect Harry Brown, who ran for the office of president as an independent, has issued a statement about the whole 9-11 thing.
And basically, Harry is saying that as usual in America, we are asking the wrong question.
The wrong question.
Our American president is saying that the reason this is being done to us is because, you know, these people hate our freedoms.
They hate what we stand for.
They hate the fact that we are a free people.
Harry says that's wrong.
And what he says deserves attention, I think.
He quotes Charlie Reese, who said, it is absurd to suppose that a human being sitting around suddenly stands up and says, hey, you know, I hate freedom.
So I think I'm going to go blow myself up.
That deserves a little bit of thought.
Harry instead, and I don't agree with him fully all the way through on this, but he feels that what we have done abroad, what America has done abroad, and we are a warlike people, you know.
We are.
Uh, in fact, uh, perhaps increasingly so.
We are a warlike people.
We might as well face up to it.
We say a lot of things, but we do in fact encircle the globe with our power and our influence and our military.
And that's what we do.
I've got so much to get on.
Anyway, I just sort of wanted to pass kudos to Harry.
Not that I agree with all of it.
But I do agree that perhaps we're asking ourselves the wrong question.
Because it wouldn't have so much to do with somebody hating our freedoms as it might have to do with what we have done around the world.
And I think agree or disagree, fan or not fan of the administration, or really every American administration, because we've always pretty much been the same.
Let's face it, we are a warlike people.
We've been in a lot of wars.
That's just the way it is.
And so what we have done around the world, to some degree Harry is suggesting, is now coming back to haunt us.
And it's not that people, as the quote said, just get up one morning and decide to kill themselves because they're objecting to America's and Americans' freedom.
but rather what we have done around world worth a little bit of thought i would say the the you All right.
You're going to enjoy this.
At least, I hope you're going to enjoy it.
A major song writer, singer, has not only written but sung a song about this radio program.
You're about to hear it.
Let me read you this.
Last summer, when independent singer-songwriter Sean Hogan was flying home from working on his forthcoming album, he glanced away from the Midwest skies to catch a newspaper headline that read something like, Conspiracy Radio, the new format.
Though he did think it was a little late for the hornblowing, as a talk radio format was nothing really new to Hogan, still, he did share the enthusiasm for the entertaining and late-night debate-oriented radio format.
It was a sign, says Hogan.
A sign from the sky in a high-spirited tone.
I had always enjoyed late-night drive-home from many a gig in the mid-90s while listening to Arpell's radio programs.
I thought for some time about writing a song about art, or would that be a boop art in a show?
When I got home, I started to think about the mood it created.
When you listen to his program, you have to admit that anything that makes you think is generally a good thing, and art does that all the time, said Hogan.
I wrote the song around the headline, Conspiracy Radio, catchphrase, and in the end, I feel it captures the sense you get listening to the dark in his show.
When I played the song, my co-producer I thought it ranked right on up there was Home of My Best Stuff.
So it was initially only going to be on the next U.S. album.
I decided we ought to put it on the new Canadian album, too.
We recorded it, and though it is not entirely finished, it sounds fairly exciting so far.
In fact, he's going to air it on his weekend show.
That's what I'm going to do.
By the way, Sean Hogan won the Roots Artist of the Year Award six months ago for his recordings in Canada at the same time that he was having some of his first U.S. success with his debut international release scoring a top 30 American album chart position.
So if you listen carefully to the song I'm about to play, you will hear this program, the one you listen to, Coast to Coast, mentioned repeatedly.
You will hear Area 51 mentioned if you listen very carefully.
Anyway, that's Sean Hogan in Conspiracy Radio all about this program.
And I thought, not bad at all.
Congratulations, Sean.
And everybody's going to say, oh, where can I get it?
Well, on his album, I guess.
Now, we're going to have, after the break, at the top of the hour, Ed Dames is going to be here.
The much hated, much loved.
But always listen to Major Ed Dames.
Dr. Doom, otherwise known as Dr. Doom.
Clearly, one of his predictions has now come true.
Well, more than one.
The article is entitled The Day the Sun Nearly Shut Down Earth.
Comes from London.
The news and cities section.
A wave of massive explosions which erupted from the sun's surface.
You may recall it.
Actually came close to shutting our butts down.
The solar flare last November, you remember that one?
I was jumping up and down about it.
The monster that they couldn't even measure.
Well, now turns out, you may know, it was actually twice as big as the previous recorded biggest.
So violent that satellite detectors couldn't figure out how big it was because it all went off scale.
Totally, totally off scale.
Now turns out it might have been as big as an X-48 with the actually with the equivalent of 5,000 suns all at once.
We had an aurora, but it was aimed away from Earth.
A shot, you might call it over the bow.
I mean, clearly, this is one of Ed's predictions, and clearly this is a shot across the bow.
A shot across the bow, of course, doesn't actually hit the ship.
It's intended as a warning.
Ed Dames said there would be a shot across the bow by the sun.
Clearly, this qualifies.
In fact, let's see, what does it say?
An accompanying aura was, in fact, seen aurora seen in the skies over southern England.
At the time, one scientist described the power of the flare as being greater than, quote, every nuclear warhead being detonated at once, end quote.
So if that's not a shot across the bow, then I don't know what it is.
And the answer is it is a shot across the bow.
And then on to another one of Ed's predictions with regard, I believe, to the first nuclear weapon that's going to be used in anger.
Well, guess what?
It was in all the headlines.
I got it from Matt Drudge.
The headline is, North Korea says standoff with U.S. at, quote, brink of nuclear war, end quote.
North Korea said Friday the standoff over its atomic ambitions was on the brink of nuclear war as U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney headed to the region for talks with key Asian allies.
The Stalinist State's official news agency accused Washington of driving the military situation on the Korean Peninsula, quote, to the brink of nuclear war with plans for a preemptive strike on North Korea.
Now, the North Koreans are famous, of course, for blustering around hither and yon.
Very, very famous for that.
And they frequently say things like this.
But I'll tell you something.
When you consider what we did to and are doing to Iraq, and our major motive for doing so, of course, was their possible weapons of mass destruction.
So, if that really was the motivation, then we obviously had much more motivation to attack Korea, didn't we?
Because Korea has nuclear weapons.
Korea has lots and lots of nuclear weapons.
Uh, well, I guess I should qualify that.
Not like Russia, but how many do you need?
And were one to go off.
They also, by the way, have the means to deliver it possibly to as far as the US West Coast.
And would they do something like that?
Yes, they're crazy.
The North Korean regime is clearly crazy.
And I mean crazy in the truest sense of crazy.
They are whacked out.
They're whacked jobs.
And they may be fully capable of suicidal moves.
Of course, if we were to be, you know, if a nuclear weapon went off on the West Coast somewhere, we would obliterate the, you know, the nation of North Korea would cease to exist.
And I can't imagine they would doubt for one second, but that we would literally obliterate their country.
Anyway, my point is that with regard to two predictions Ed has made, one has already happened.
That X-48, no question about what it was.
It was a shot across the bow.
And with respect to North Korea, well, there's not very much question about that one either, because when you look at a headline like this, you know that something awful can't be far away.
This bumper music was done by Jim Watkins to celebrate the great Dean Scream.
I want you to listen to the phone numbers coming up very carefully because we're about to do open lines and the numbers are a little different here on the weekend.
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So listen carefully.
To talk with Art Bell.
Call the wildcard line at area code 775-727-1295.
The first-time caller line is area code 775-727-1222.
To talk with Art Bell from east of the Rockies, call toll-free at 800-825-5033.
From west of the Rockies, call 800-618-8255.
International callers may reach ART by calling your in-country sprint access number, pressing option 5, and dialing toll-free, 800-893-0903.
From coast to coast and worldwide on the internet, this is Coast to Coast AM with Art Bell.
The Associated Press reports a following from Juneau, Alaska.
A bird beak deformity first recorded among black-capped chickadees near Anchorage is now being increasingly seen in crows all along southeast Alaska, broadening an already mysterious phenomenon.
Black-capped chickadees, northwestern crows, and 27 other species of birds in Alaska have been reported with beaks up to three times their normal length.
The deformity often strikes mature birds and reduces their ability to feed and preen effectively.
In many birds, the deformity leads to death.
Said Colleen Handel, a wildlife biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey's Alaska Science Center in Anchorage.
We don't know what's causing the problem.
She's been looking at it now for five years, doesn't have the slightest idea what's going on with the birds.
Nor do I, but I can tell you this.
There's going to be more and more of this.
More trouble with the foliage, with animals, with frogs, with other, well, I call them parakeets, you know, like the ones you take into the mine to be sure that, you know, parakeets keel over, right, when the air is too noxious for humans to breathe, and they give us a little warning.
So what you're hearing right now is like the noise coming from a parakeet.
Harry was saying that, you know, our president is saying that these people are doing what they're doing because they hate our freedoms, sort of, right?
You know, I think that, thank you very much for the call.
I think people take statements like that as, man, that's anti-American.
No, it isn't.
It's an observation of what I consider to be just a fact.
We are a warlike people.
We're maybe a little better on balance than the communists were in Russia and the communists are in China and some others.
But in the end, we're still warlike and we do warlike things.
So if you get away from our own propaganda and Americans are propagandized like every other nation on the face of the earth, then our acts don't look all that different.
You know, it's a warlike world.
We're just real good at it.
In fact, we can make bombs that go right through windows.
You know, I mean, you pick the window pane you want it to go through and you can put that thousand-pounder dead on through.
You know, I would recommend that any of you who would like to give this some thought and email me, I'd appreciate it.
I'm easy to email artbell at mindspring.com or artbell at aol.com.
And instead of arguing about how we got there, because that's now an accomplished fact, we're in Iraq and we're presently having one hell of a time of it.
The question is, where do we go from here?
And what, if anything, is the exit strategy with regard to Iraq?
Nobody wants to be remembered as losing another war, right?
We are perceived as having lost the Vietnam War because we turned tails and we got out of there.
If we were to do that with Iraq, it would be perceived that we lost.
We're not going to do that.
I mean, it's clear to me we're not going to do that.
So what should the strategy be, number one?
And number two, how do you foresee an exit to it?
Where down the line is there any way for us to get out or get it sufficiently under control that we can get the oil, which is probably why we went there in the first place.
But my question for you, I would have emailed, so I don't have a computer, but you used to play a song by Lorena McKinnett as Bumper Music, and it used to be a theme song for a show series that was on a short time.
Do you remember what the title of that might have been?
I don't want to scare you or anything, but it had to do with you.
It was a bit of a premonition.
Oh, I woke up, like I usually fall asleep listening to every night, and I woke up this morning and I heard the strangest thing, and my heart started racing.
I sat there and listened for a whole hour for the news to come around again to make sure I hadn't heard something wrong.
But I didn't hear it again all day, and I figured it would have been huge news as it was when you retired, but there was a gun battle, and you were killed in a gun battle.
And it specifically was one where you were, it just said you were killed in a gun battle in which your son was injured.
And there is a news story that has been circulating about the al-Qaeda guy, he was a Canadian, and his sons were, and they were in Afghanistan, and he was shot, and he was killed.
And his son was paralyzed, and he just came back to Canada because they have a one-time only thing where they can use where they can come back to Canada.
So we have a right to return, no matter who you are or who you're connected with.
But that gave me quite a fright today.
And I was just nervous.
I listened to the radio all day.
And when you finally came on at 12, I just had a huge sigh of relief.
Well, we had two tornadoes within about a quarter mile of my house in southwest Houston, and on the radio, on the Doppler, on the television, the whole screen was just purple.
I looked at it and went, oh, my God, somebody down there is getting slammed.
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Oh, boy, it is.
It was.
Well, one thing on the methane that they were talking about on Mars, what's kind of interesting to me is being down here in the Gulf Coast, we pay a lot of attention to what goes on in the drilling and going on out there in the Gulf.
You know, they've found a lot of methane down there in the bottom of the Gulf, which is very, very deep canyons, which resembles a lot, like, they say, the surface of Mars.
And there are these little snake-like worms that they call, that live down there.
I mean, we just finished saying, other than the two rovers that we most recently sent to Mars, everything previous to that was not sterilized.
Therefore, there could have been microbes all over the probes that we landed on Mars.
And when and if we do finally establish, without question, there is life on Mars, we are not going to know if it's life that was native to Mars or, in fact, put there by us.
That's one big problem.
And then, as was pointed out by, I guess, last week, and this caller didn't exactly point out, but it's the same thing.
We're sending a probe right now to recover the leavens of a comet.
In other words, comets were once thought to have perhaps even seeded life.
So we're going and we're getting comet dust and eventually Mars, dirt, and dust and organisms, and we're going to bring them back.
And you've got to wonder how good an idea that would be.
No, I don't mean it to come across that way at all.
What I personally feel, I'm separating from what I observe.
And what I observe is that we're a warlike people like the rest of the world.
We're not any different.
Maybe a little better in some ways, but not in any big ways.
We're still out there at war and killing people.
unidentified
Okay, in the case of North Korea, if I was North Koreans and the United States was parading around with, I mean, what we're doing in Iraq, I would turn my nuclear electricity over to making weapons too.
Because, you know, the United States, willy-nilly, almost, you're going to another country.
Basically, we took over, you know, Iraq took over a country basically because of whatever.
How can we tell another country that we should be the only ones with nuclear weapons?
So I'm not going to apologize for acting in our own best interest, although I might argue a bit about what our own best interest is.
I'm not sure that at the time we invaded Iraq that we were invading the country that was really threatening us.
Didn't turn out to have weapons of mass destruction, but Korea does have them.
North Korea not only has them, but they're threatening to use them.
So if the measurement was our own self-interest, what America best does to protect herself and her people and her borders, then probably attacking North Korea would have been a better bet.
Wouldn't you think?
Let's see, on one hand, we've got a country like Iraq, which we thought might have something.
And on the other hand, we've got a country like North Korea that says we do have something.
We know they've got nuclear weapons.
unidentified
Moreover, they're stating they're going to use them on us.
You know, they've talked about attacking California with a nuclear weapon.
So I'm not an apologist for a nation like ours that protects its own.
That's what we have to do.
I'm simply saying that weighing everything together, and that's what I'm trying to do here, we'd have been better off attacking North Korea, taking the damn things away from them before they do use them on us.
Well, that's an interesting start, all right, to an hour coming up.
Actually, the next three hours coming up with Major Ed Dames.
Now, Major Dames has hit a few recently.
Really big ones.
Like that shot across the bow thing.
I'll read that story again.
There's no question about it.
unidentified
That was it.
Girl, I think it's time to get ready To realize just what I have found Get it in writing with the After Dark Newsletter.
Subscribe by calling 1-888-727-5505.
We'll be right back.
Be it sight of the sand, the smell of the touch, the something inside that we need so much.
The sight of the touch, or the scent of the sand, or the strength of an oak root deep in the ground.
The wonder of flowers to be covered and then to burst up through tarmac to the sun again.
Or to fly to the sun without burning a wing.
To lie in the meadow and hear the grass sing, have all these things in our memories home.
From the useless to help us to follow.
Find, find how she saw, take this place, on this trip, just call me.
Find, take a big wall, in my mind, I'm gonna see, it's for free.
Wanna take a ride?
To talk with Art Bell, call the wildcard line at area code 775-727-1295.
The first-time caller line is area code 775-727-1222.
To talk with Art Bell from east of the Rockies, call toll-free 800-825-5033.
From west of the Rockies, call 800-618-8255.
International callers may reach ART by calling your in-country sprint access number, pressing option 5, and dialing toll-free 800-893-0903.
From coast to coast and worldwide on the internet, this is Coast to Coast AM with Art Bell.
Larry of Los Angeles, California tenderly writes, Let's all just agree to hate America art and get it over with, huh?
Odd how all the calls reflect one viewpoint.
Who screens them?
Okay, an hour of Bush bashing is the whole program to go this way.
Oh, Larry, you're so full of methane.
How could you possibly, and yet I knew they would, have interpreted my remarks as anti-American?
They're not.
I love America.
I've been all around the world, Larry.
This is the best nation on the face of the earth.
You have more relative freedom here than you do anywhere else in the world.
You have more of an ability to express your point of view than anywhere else in the world.
This is the best country in the world by far.
So I never said that.
And as far as screening calls, no one screens them.
I just pick them up.
Had you called Larry, you would have known that.
I never screened calls.
And as for an hour of bush-bashing, no, indeed not.
Wrong again, Larry.
Wasn't that at all.
I said we're a warlike people.
America is a warlike nation.
And that just makes us like the rest of the world.
That's all.
That's not a bash.
In fact, we do what's in our best interest.
And I was arguing that in our best interest, we would have, or should have, perhaps, based on reality, attacked Korea, not Iraq, Larry.
The There is nobody that comes on this program more loved and hated than Major Ed Dames.
Major Dames is the world's foremost remote viewing teacher.
Edward A. Dames, Major U.S. Army, retired now, is a decorated military intelligence officer, an original member of the U.S. Army prototype remote viewing training program, served as the training and operations officer for the Defense Intelligence Agency's Psychic Intelligence, or PSIIMT, collection unit, and currently serves as executive director for the Matrix Intelligence Agency, a private consulting group.
Ed is a technical consultant for the featured film Suspect Zero, plays the role of an FBI remote viewing instructor in the movie as well.
As I said, there's nobody more loved nor hated on this program than Ed Ames.
He's been appearing with me for years.
And two of the things that we discussed earlier tonight, the North Korean brink of nuclear war headline, and, of course, the day from London, the day the sun nearly shut down the Earth.
It happened in November.
And we now have learned that it was the biggest spit of the sun, of our sun, in all measurement, in all the time, short as that may be cosmically, that we've been even measuring what the sun does.
And it definitely qualifies as what Major Ed Ames called the shot across the bow that we could expect before the kill shot.
There can't be any argument about it.
I read you this entire article, the magnitude of what the sun did.
I came from a very violent background, so I was attracted to the peacefulness of the islands, and I've always loved the ocean, as much as you probably love the desert.
Well, look, I just, in the first hour of the program, and I know you didn't hear because our time for the program is offset there in Hawaii, I spent a lot of time talking about several things.
Of course, the current war situation.
But also, the day the sun nearly shut down Earth.
Clearly, the shot across the bow.
I guess, you know, this is kind of reverse of the way we normally do things.
Remote viewing, I mean, most of my audience is by now they know what remote viewing is, but I suppose we have this responsibility.
A remote viewer is a trained, disciplined psychic, really.
I think that's what we do is we turn that innate ability that we all really have into a skill.
That didn't come easy.
It came at a price of about two decades and $20 million worth of research to find out how to do that accurately, how to turn one's unconscious attention to any idea, any idea whatsoever, lock on to it, and to produce information about that idea, whether it's a person, place, thing, or event, accurate information.
Now, the things that we're talking about mostly tonight are predictive intelligence.
Very valuable to military intelligence.
But when I retired, I turned my attention towards civilian scenarios rather than military.
Most of them work for me, either in the military or in the civilian capacity, or both.
But what I deal with are things that I think are important because these events, the kinds of events that we've been talking about on your show for seven and a half years and will again tonight, are going to take the most human life.
These are the events That will kill the most people.
And therefore, I feel almost responsible, I suppose that's an apropos word, to get the word out just in terms of warning.
Take it or leave it.
But these particular, and I'll set the stage for this momentarily, these things are going to kill a lot of us.
And I'll tell you something right now, those of you who are scared and made ill at ease by very serious predictions, some pretty doom and gloomy, you really should turn off your radios.
Because, Ed, some people are much more blissful if they don't know, and they don't want to know.
And I understand that.
There are some things even I don't want to know, and I suspect some you don't want to know.
I've asked you a couple times, have you ever remote viewed the manner of your own death?
There's a lot of people who don't want to know that the sun could kill us and may kill us and that you've actually seen this event.
Now, most people poo-pooed it when you first said it, but you talked about a shot across the bow.
Well, is there any question at all?
I don't think so.
You could call this a shot across the bow, and you'd be technically correct.
I mean, that's what it was.
So now, everybody's going to want to know, me included, Ed, now that the shot across the bow has occurred, can you use that as a marker to see how far the so-called kill shot is away?
And I'm glad you're saying it, Ed, because when you come on, I inevitably get a lot of emails and angry people who, well, I've been keeping track, and Ed missed this and this and this and this.
Now, this is not a geophysical event, but I've been saying it for seven years.
The next use on the battlefield of a nuclear weapon will be on the Korean peninsula.
Now, I'm not saying a nuclear slugfest.
I'm saying that the North Koreans have emplaced a nuclear weapon and will detonate it when hostilities start on the ground.
And that short war will end very, very quickly without a slugfest.
But that event is going to be eclipsed by this grand catastrophe that I talked about that I've been trying to get my teeth into for a long, long time, even before I did your show as well.
Once ground hostilities start, nothing that moves in North Korea is going to is everything that moves, every moving target indicator is going to be shot up by the United States.
So they can't afford to take the family jewels and put it on a truck or a missile or anything else like that.
They're going to lose it.
And so what they've done is taken at least one weapon and in place, think of a mine, a nuclear mine.
They've placed it on the North Korean Peninsula not far north of the DMZ so that if we attack or counter-attack, once, let's say, the 2nd Infantry Division is in position, that weapon will be detonated right there.
It seems to me that if North Korea used a nuclear weapon against our troops or our country, you know, they threatened to let one fly into California or whatever.
Is it possible for you to take on, as a remote viewing task, finding out if, and I don't know how you would do this with remote viewing, if the top leadership of North Korea really is suicidally crazy?
There are a number of different ways that we could talk.
For instance, I could use, if I used you as a target, which I would never do for ethical reasons, it would be Art Bell, and then I would qualify that with Deep Mind, and then I would qualify that with a time qualifier, present time.
And I would go into your deep mind, present time, and then I could use any variations on that theme.
Each one of those remote being sessions would take at least an hour.
So I could look at what's uppermost in your mind at this moment.
How would a thought, which would you'd be looking for an intent on my part, how would that manifest itself?
I mean, normally you're, as I say, you're drawing an object or a bridge or, you know, that's the typical remote viewing stuff when you want to prove remote viewing works.
But when you're in somebody's head, that's a whole different thing.
Let's say that you hated someone and that's uppermost in your mind.
You've told no one this.
So what I would find when I would remote view you in this hypothetical situation would be after I gain access to you, which would take about 20 minutes, standard protocols.
We teach this in the workshops.
Then I would start sketching perhaps a rifle and crosshairs and a scope, looking at a person.
And that would be a sketch.
I would describe the person, the rifle, and things like that.
And then I would turn my attention to this tangential figure, this person, let's say, and find out who that is.
And then I could go back into your head, allegorically speaking, and find out why you hated this person, those kinds of things.
So a very strong emotion or feeling on my part might not translate to reality.
And so you could come back with a report that the North Koreans hate our guts, that the North Koreans are...
In other words, the only people crazy enough to start a nuclear war, since mutual assured destruction always and did work except with people who are truly out of their minds and suicidal, you could determine, could you not, if the leadership there has suicidal tendencies?
So, be warned, if you're easily disturbed, and a lot of people are out there.
You turn this off, I mean that.
This is really disturbing stuff, and you've gotta, I don't know, you've gotta take it, or leave it, or digest it, or maybe it'll make you think, which is good, but whatever.
It's pretty disturbing, so be warned.
The End Speaking of seriously disturbing, Ed, just not to sidetrack you, but Priscilla from Edmonton, Canada writes, hey Art, please ask Ed about Aaron Donahue.
Aaron was a former student of mine, is a former student of mine, and he essentially made some decisions and some choices that I could not support and sustain.
We'd rather look ahead at the physical phenomena or the physicality of events or the existence now of weapons hidden or otherwise, those kinds of things, real-world stuff, rather than simply ideas which may be floating around in the person's head that may or may not be active upon the point.
There was a time when Ed had been telling me that there was a time past which he really couldn't see or could not remote view, which he chose to call the discontinuity.
Now, when you began looking at different things with remote viewing, did you continually, as you looked out in years, keep running into this what you call discontinuity?
Yes, and not only are we running into it now, but the harbinger that I'm going to tell you and your audience about this evening on Easter's Eve, this harbinger will have already popped up in people's dreams.
Many of your listeners will have seen this in dreams.
As a professional, I don't have any monopoly on the truth.
I just have a monopoly on accuracy.
So the truth trickles down.
It's like an over-the-horizon radar.
Mind looks out and says, uh-oh, you need to know about this.
The problem is that our egoic mind and our analytical mind and our conditioning muck up the real pristine information.
Actually, as you and I speak right now, if you look across fully one half of the United States at the U.S.-Mexican border and above and below, I talked to a man in the first hour, Ed, who had lost power, was sitting there in the candlelight calling me because of the violent storms, tornadoes, he said, on the radar all around him.
Really, really bad weather all across, I mean, violent.
The epiphenomena that you see, these 11-year cycles, 21-year cycles, those are just small little epiphenomena in a very large cycle, which is probably about 11,500 to 12,000 years.
And we just happen to be alive at the tail end of one of those.
Now, here's what, this is important, and before everybody goes to bed, listen to this.
When you see a space shuttle, one of our space shuttles, being forced to come down and land because of a meteor shower, that is the beginning of the end.
That's the harbinger.
Immediately after that will begin some drastic geophysical changes in the Earth, eventually resulting in a wobble and possibly an entire pole shift.
The wobble will cause waves as high as 2,000 feet.
Now, the space shovels are grounded until 2005.
So we're not going to see this until at least 2005.
But that's what to look for when a shovel is forced down because of the meteor shower.
beginning in 2005 and we're going to have a tremendous number of earthquakes, very serious earthquakes worldwide followed by, for some reason or another, intense meteor showers.
Now, I don't understand why, but I'm just...
No, I'm a trained observer, and that's what I'm observing as Remote Viewer is, and not just me, my entire team.
These meteor showers, very intense meteor showers, where the meteors are not, it isn't just the leonids and a nice display.
These things are coming down to the deck and hitting, impacting Earth.
But when you see that one event, when there is a space shuttle mission up and it has it.
They're going to get crisped and not crisped necessarily, but die of dehydration.
what's going to happen is there is this passing space body.
It does look like the idea of Planet X or Niburu.
I don't know I don't understand the the geophysics, but it passes by at the same time the sun erupts, so I'm assuming there's some type of a link of a linkage or a flux there.
Okay, when that happens, shortly after this space shuttle mission is aborted, what happens is these solar flares are hitting the Earth and they're coming through when the shields are down, our electromagnetic shields are down.
They're causing a lot of the atmosphere to heat up.
So it's not like we're getting fried by X-rays.
What's happening is the Earth is heating up, the winds are picking up to very high speeds, and most of the deaths will occur from people dehydrating, being in winds that are 300 miles an hour,
and then finally when the Earth starts to wobble, and I don't know how long this is going to take, but the Earth will begin to wobble, and my guess is that it's not a direct effect of this passing space body gravitationally, but it's because of the rapid melting of ice.
Well, whether you believe it's man's hand or nature's hand, it doesn't matter.
There was a story the other day suggesting global warming has now begun to feed upon itself, which means that it's going to worsen at a far more rapid pace than previously considered.
At least that's one great theory that it's begun to feed on itself.
Those are the kinds of stories I'm seeing right now.
We know that in 2005 there's a lot of earthquakes, so that may be one thing, and the year after that it looks real dark and a lot of meteors, but things get fuzzy right there, and I think it's because we're running up against this wall.
There is another thing in terms of survival, I wanted to talk about that.
The places that you need to be, hopefully, I mean, we don't know in terms of this wobble what kind of wave action we're looking at on Earth.
It's just too complex.
But to be on the safe side, if one wanted to be on the safe side, you would have to be either far inland or very high or both.
3,000 feet above sea level or very far inland, for instance.
Another very interesting thing, if you own a large sailboat, that's okay too.
No, really, it's a strange thing.
But large sailboats, you know, with very heavy keels, if they flip over, they pop, they right themselves.
And a regular boat doesn't.
So that's good.
But the damaging thing, even after the Earth settles back down and re-establishes an equilibrium with a new pole star, actually I did a video on this where I detail it.
It's called The Kill Shot.
It's a C D that we put out.
You don't need to get that C D if you're listening to this show.
My guest is Major Ed Dames, and the worry of it all is that, yes, for what misses he has had, he's had an awful lot of really big hits in my estimation.
The biggest recent one being the shot across the bow.
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The biggest one being the shot across the bow.
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The End Cutting right to the heart of the matter, we're talking about a kill shot from the sun, which actually is a series of shots from the sun, perhaps much like the one in November, only Earthbound, the result of which would be any number of things,
including a couple of billion dead on Earth, the beginning of a wobble of the planet itself, 300 mile per hour winds.
So I'm getting a million computer questions, some of them very relevant, most people wanting to know about their area, but some interesting questions like, hey, Ed, what about the U.S. sub-fleet?
You know, the sea boomers and fast attackers and all that sort of thing that we've got prowling the seas?
What happens to those doing, you know, with 2,000-foot-high waves?
You know, and I've got to tell you, you know, there are people like Nancy, what's her name, and so forth, who say Planet X is going to get us, and they've laid down some days and deadlines and times when it was going to happen, and it didn't happen.
And then there's others, for example, on the net, that from time to time post pictures of things they claim they see out there right now, planets, bodies, that kind of thing.
I've kind of thought it was baloney, at least the pictures I've been seeing, trying to show something incoming right now.
To me, it looks like a lens flare or any number of other things, but it definitely doesn't look like.
It's planet size, perhaps as large as Pluto or Sharon, you know, or Karen.
It's planet size.
It passes real close to the Earth, and as it comes around the Sun, it passes us again.
And it looks like the Sitchin idea, Earth and upheaval, those kinds of books.
It looks like there's something there, that this thing comes in the solar system like a battle, swings by the inner orbits and back out again.
It leaves.
But when it does, whatever orbital frequency it has, however many years, some people are suggesting every 3,600 years, some of those passes are pretty darn close.
If 2 billion people die, then by present estimates, that would be 4 billion that might live.
That's still human beings somehow going forward.
Although I suppose I could ask why and would those people wish they were dead, as in the old scenario of, you know, better to die than to live with what the world would be.
The only places that I know for sure that we have actually looked at, and I mentioned before on your show, are to the west of Glacier National Park, some areas in the western part, I'm sorry, the eastern part of British Columbia.
It looks like Switzerland and Liechtenstein are survivable, but learn remote viewing.
I mean, once the satellites are gone, there is this thing proposed called broadband over power lines, and they're going to screw up shortwave with it big time.
That's another whole story, so I was just sort of tossing that in.
That's clearly what the scientists would seem to be indicating in the story.
You know, that if something of that magnitude had hit us, that would be the was pointed away from Earth.
If it had been pointed to Earth, what Ed says is what would have occurred.
And if the gun barrel had been pointed at Earth, that would have been it.
So that was a shot across bow.
And you're saying that that magnitude or greater is going to occur, bang, bang, bang, bang, in sequence, depressing the Earth's magnetic field more with each hit.
Well, the underground part is because of the high winds.
That doesn't mean that it's a permanent position, but the winds will be so high.
For how long?
A few weeks.
I've talked to NOAA folks, and they've done some back-of-the-envelope calculations, and they say, well, we're looking at massive belts, big, big belts across places on the globe where winds will be sustained at 250, 300 miles an hour for a moment.
I mean, our pole now wanders a few degrees at least every now and then, and it's presently on a magnetic North Pole on its way toward Alaska, I believe.
It's migrating and I'm sorry, Russia.
Russia, it'll end up in Russia or something like that.
Now, let me note for the audience that what Ed is saying now has it really resonates for me when I recall what Gordon Michael Scallion said.
And Gordon Michael for years, another guy that I'm pretty close to and have a lot of respect for, though he saw it in a different way, Ed, he too said the Earth was going to wobble.
And he referred to the fluid and the dynamics of the way it works inside the Earth.
And he saw all of that unbalancing and sort of causing a wobble of the Earth.
And it's pretty close to what you're saying.
I guess in a different, you're imagining different scenarios that will begin this process, but it's exactly otherwise the same thing that Gordon Michael Scallion said.
Well, I don't understand the geophysics, and I'm not certain about the dynamics, but I am telling you right now, after that particular event where Space Shuttle is forced down because of a meteor shower, very, very soon, I'm not talking years, but very soon afterwards, months perhaps, will these events begin to transpire?
I can't even imagine what it would be like if the Earth's people had three months' notice of something that was going to come that close to Earth.
I mean, very rapidly when they saw its size, they would understand, our scientists would certainly understand the effect that it would have on Earth, or likely would have on Earth, and it would be, you know, it would be that remember, we're talking about unprecedented events here that have never before transpired in human history or in physics.
Remember I said people have been taking pictures and that sort of thing.
Would there be any chance at all that people would be right now, today or yesterday, or last week or last month or last year, could have possibly optically observed this planet coming toward us?
If you had information of the sort that Ed has, what kind of process would you go through before you decided that you were going to tell the world about it?
I mean, basically, it scares the you-know-what out of everybody, so you'd have to think real hard before you release this information.
I think we'll ask about that.
I mean, even if our own government knew that there was an object out there headed to Earth that would cause, you know, potentially, okay, fine, a wobble, mass death, billions of people dying, that sort of thing.
I know this sounds like heresy to some people who believe that everybody should know everything, but at some point, really there's an argument, a fair one, I think, that can be made for not telling when something like that was going to happen, because the obvious would occur.
There would be looting.
There would be the Mad Max scenario.
There would be people dying who didn't need to die.
Many of them, even billions of them, perhaps, panicked over such an event.
So even I think Ed, our own government would take pause before making such a thing public.
And you are making this public.
And I wonder what kind of process you went through mentally before deciding to say something like this and really lay it out like this.
People, you know, I'm supported by thousands of people who take care of me As my doctors and truck drivers and all kinds of people, they do their job to support me and they give me a high quality of life.
I'm going to turn around and do the same for them.
This is what I do for a living.
I run an over-the-horizon radar station.
My team and I look ahead through time and we say, holy macro, look what's coming.
I haven't yet, and you know why I haven't, because I don't know if I want to know, Ed.
I'm one of those people who may be blissfully, I mean, I listen to what you say tonight, and look, here's somebody who asks, hey, Art, ask him about the Great Lakes.
So people like you, who really follow their hearts and are not chasing materialistic goals or are chasing something inside, you don't have to be remote viewers.
You're already connected.
So you're okay.
That's one of the reasons you're going to be okay because you didn't buy into the party line.
Whether or not you ever knew, you ever heard me say these things before or believed me or heard Gordon Michael Scion speak, whether or not it was true, you'd still probably be okay because you followed that internal compass.
When I worked for Fortune 500 companies, when that company wanted that new widget in their product line to be the one, and my team would come back and say, oh, no, the Japanese are going to develop this.
And here, actually, Lonnie in Mill Valley, California has a good point.
If we have that kind of notice that an event of that possible scale is going to occur, Ed, we would, in fact, have time to cool the reactors down, wouldn't we?
I don't think that scientists, and I don't think that the leadership in most countries would suggest how bad this is going to be or even know how bad it's going to be, and so they would not give the order to cool the reactors down.
See, Ed, I can't see it as distinctly and in the kind of detail you can.
From my point of view, I smell it coming already, and I've smelled it coming for some time.
But I can't nail the events down the way you seem to be able to do.
I just know it's coming.
I know.
I can feel the changes underway now.
I actually, whether it's the weather, social behavior, or the politics of the world, which are pretty, as usual, warlike, or whatever all, I can feel it coming, Ed.
I've known for some time that it's coming, but I don't know the kind of details that you have.
And going back to what you said earlier, I don't know if I want to know, Ed.
I really don't.
And that's why I haven't yet tried remote viewing.
we are going to open up the phone lines shortly and you're just going to be peppered with these kinds of questions and probably some of the usual uh...
people are looking What's the latest on Mars, Ed?
They think they see signs of life, you know, this methane and all the rest of it.
I just mentioned on your last show, everything that I had from the military team and from the CIA and NSA, people that worked for me, the reviewers that worked for me, and myself, I put them all into the Are Aliens Real tape, the videotape.
By the way, I'd like to thank Alex Lonewood, your webmaster, for posting all those educational websites on tonight's show links.
You can either go to my web, my central website, remoteviewing2004.com, anytime, or you can go to yours, or you can dial a toll-friend number and buy any of those things, or sign up for my workshops.
To sign up for a workshop, I teach these personally and uh or to or to order any of the uh educational products that I ha that I've created is uh the order line is one eight six six six zero seven eight four three nine.
But there is, there will be, and I stand by this, and even the military team had this under our belts in terms of information.
There is, in the out years, we're looking at a crisp earth, at a barren terrain in many, many places, really stark environment, and then this other race lands.
Many people would be, yeah, as large, very large, life-threatening events come up over the event horizon where people's lives are in danger, especially people who are gifted psychically with long psychic antennas, so to speak, too.
They'll be the ones to first pick this up and start having dreams.
And those dreams will be very, very similar, one to another.
Well, so a lot of people are going to begin to get this message all at once, or this will be going on for some time, and will it be apocalyptic dreams or what?
I've had a lot of dreams in my time, and how would one ever separate the true prophetic dreams from, you know, I've had a lot of silly dreams, sexy dreams, dreams of all kinds of things, Ed.
Toss most of them, except the ones that you really feel are important.
You wake up and say, oh my goodness, John, I've never had a dream.
That's the one where something was behind it.
As a remote viewer, if you learn the remote view, you can remote view the seed of that dream.
What seeded that dream?
The seed is important.
That's your unconscious trying to tell you something.
Don't get on that plane tomorrow, or stop eating this, or you have pancreatic cancer.
By the end of the dream, two hours later, all the trash of the day and your fears and your desires, humans are driven by fear and desire, that all mucks it up and then finally you end up on a battlefield somewhere where what started out to be your pancreatic cancer turns into be a battle, something like that.
Well, a remote viewer can go right to the seat of the dream.
If you tell me, I've had this dream about this battle.
I was right there.
It was so clear.
It was like vivid dream, that kind of thing.
I can take that dream as a professional and go right to the seat and see what happened and say, hey, this battle that you're having is a battle with a tumor or something like that.
But still, the whole concept that somewhere the Bible, what is written in the Bible, if it is truly prophetic and what you are saying, may mesh, or it might even be logical that they would mesh.
The likelihood, as far as I, as a professional remote viewer, and an analyst, that's all that I'm saying from my point of view, from that point of view, the likelihood of what is going to happen, described tonight, is 100%.
They're willing to go on just like it didn't happen or they're willing to believe they love their job and they love remote viewing and they stand by their work.
You'll hear them talk about it in the media, on television, and movies.
But when they see this one thing, they have to be here underground and their family has to be here, they look at that and they turn away and they pretend that it's not there.
Well, and if the remote viewers who actually worked this problem with you are in denial with regard to its results, then how do you suppose the general public is going to not in terms of the results are in terms of the acceptance.
I saw the sun eject a plume at about 33 degrees as I was looking at it from the left, from the bottom of the sun, just out from the bottom of the sun, 33 degrees.
The Earth swept through it, and we were peppered because the plume had dense parts and less dense.
And we were peppered for quite a while.
It looked like Asia and Europe and the Soviet Union got hit first, and we kind of spun into it.
And I realized, because we were moving through the plume, that the thing was like peppering.
And you were talking about the Bible.
The Bible says that the earth will reel to and fro like a drunkard, and the earth will be moved exceedingly.
Yeah, and that also, you know, kind of tells me that way back when, even before Galileo and all this, somebody was saying the earth was a sphere because that terminology is usually, you know, for something that's round.
The two, I suppose, are sort of interchangeable, or people make them interchangeably, even though I know you would object mightily and list all the things that are different about remote viewing.
It's still both are predictions of our future, and they sound very similar.
His, just more detailed.
So there would be no way in remote viewing to see or recognize which continents catch the worst of it.
If there were shots from the sun, Ed, you know, depending on the Earth's rotation and where these shots actually hit, yes, there would be areas that would be much harder to hit than others, continents, perhaps.
The reason I don't talk about it, and the reason I'm not saying anything, Art, is because I don't want to be responsible for somebody making a decision based upon that information and it being wrong and me being responsible for the loss of life.
That's why I'm not commenting on it.
I've given you enough general information to know what to do or kind of where to go in a general sense.
But anything other than that in terms of detail, I don't have any detail.
You're suggesting people are going to have to spend about two weeks underground surviving with water, food, and whatever else you need to keep body and soul going for at least two weeks.
Okay, well, it does make sense that as we spiral with the sun, we do enter this area where there would be a greater danger, I suppose, of objects, as in planets or things or whatever, that could encounter Earth.
You know, I bet Ed is going to want to respond to this himself.
Hey, Ed, Susan in Salt Lake City, Utah says, if the solar flare across the bow happened last November, well, then how come Ed is telling us now and not last November?
Number one, Ed did tell us.
Number two, Ed predicted that long before, not just in the previous month, but long, long time prior to that.
In fact, there were a couple of extremely large solar flares, and I asked Ed on various shows, Ed, was that it?
And it struck me to ask you, have you ever tried remote viewing the rapture?
Because maybe that's their only way of escape through faith.
And one other comment I just wanted to throw in there since you were talking about the dreams.
Mine, I felt was more like a vision also 11 years ago that I saw Jesus lift up the top of the Washington Monument, the triangular part, and place palm branches in it and then close it.
What I said was there's 100% likelihood, as far as I'm concerned, from my perspective as a professional, that very shortly after that aforementioned event, this discontinuity, this grand conflagration, this tribulation, this cleansing will start.
So all I'm saying is the closest I can get that I've been able to get so far, and I don't think I'm going to do any more work on this art.
I really think I'm finished with this stuff because I want to go back to problem solving.
And I think this is close enough for government work that when you see that event, very, very soon after will be the beginning of this kill shot sequence.
I just wanted to ask you, as far as, well, I'll make a comment here on the last caller about the rapture.
I think what you're looking at is super luminals.
But aside from your average cargo cults, there's a whole herd of NOAAs out here among us.
Let me preface that.
Have you ever, or your teams, ever remote viewed the individuals, groups, organizations that are working on building large ships to take some of this out of here?
The way I would handle it would be to look at the event and then turn my attention once I lock on to the event or part of the event or the acne of the event, then to lock on to an aspect of our government, whether it be the President or Department of Defense, NORAD, whatever.
But I wouldn't, that's something else I wouldn't spend any time on.
It just seems to me that 2,000 years later, we're still talking about Jesus.
Prior to that, 1,600 years or so, there may have been some previous civilization record of this planet coming through.
I know the moon has gravitational pull on the Earth with the tides and what have you.
If this planet, which I've heard through your program is about three to five times the size of Earth, comes by, would there not be a gravitational pull if it came between the Earth and the Sun, would that not potentially draw that solar flare, potentially suck up molten from the volcanic surface of the Earth, causing the earthquakes, causing volcanic eruption, causing even a wobble of the entire Earth?
Either, number one, that yes, the gravitational effects start to wobble, or two, that the rapid, the coincident series of very large sun flares causes a heating in the Earth and a rapid melting of the polarized cap and other ice.
And that shift begins the wobble, that rapid melting.
Well, you know, I suppose, Ed, that a person could try and take the attitude that being alive during a special time like this, catastrophic as it might be, would in some ways be an honor to live or attempt to live through such an event.
I'm concerned about the People's Liberation Army because that's one military that I see as a real potential threat to the United States and before and specifically after a catastrophe.
Since you're in Spain and there was a recent terrorist action there, not so many Americans, I guess, have a sense of how it really hit the Spanish people.
We've got a whole set to a really streamlined, really neat learn remote viewing CDs, too, so people can do this at home that can't come to my workshop.
I typically hang out on the 75-meter band at around 3.840, 3840 Lois Iband.
So you can hear me there.
The one thing that you've said, the only thing that you've said that I actually have liked over the last couple shows is that somehow or another, me, my antenna and shortwave station are going to be on the air through this or at some point, what, during it, after it?
I don't know if I want to say it's been wonderful to have you here because the message is, you know, it goes down a little rough, but it's been one hell of a show, Ed, as always, and we'll do it again soon, brother.