Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing

Luis Elizondo

👤 Person
1527 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

In fact, if you take all the biomass of every plant, all the biomass of every animal and all the biomass of every fungus and add it up together, it still does not add up to the biomass of this hidden life form that's been here all along. And it wasn't until we could curve glass and put in a little metal tube

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

and famously shout the words, little beasties, little beasties, did we discover the world of microorganisms? And so, is it possible that these things we're dealing with are just as natural to Earth as we are? Well, it's certainly a possibility. Could these things be from underwater? Well, it's certainly a possibility. We know more about the surface of the moon than we do our own oceans.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

and famously shout the words, little beasties, little beasties, did we discover the world of microorganisms? And so, is it possible that these things we're dealing with are just as natural to Earth as we are? Well, it's certainly a possibility. Could these things be from underwater? Well, it's certainly a possibility. We know more about the surface of the moon than we do our own oceans.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

and famously shout the words, little beasties, little beasties, did we discover the world of microorganisms? And so, is it possible that these things we're dealing with are just as natural to Earth as we are? Well, it's certainly a possibility. Could these things be from underwater? Well, it's certainly a possibility. We know more about the surface of the moon than we do our own oceans.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

We have mapped less than 10% of the ocean floor. Are these things, could they be from outer space? Sure. Could they be interdimensional? And I don't mean interdimensional in kind of a woo-woo sort of way. I mean from a quantum physics sort of way, where a lot of our reality actually lies. So, you know, it's a great question to suggest.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

We have mapped less than 10% of the ocean floor. Are these things, could they be from outer space? Sure. Could they be interdimensional? And I don't mean interdimensional in kind of a woo-woo sort of way. I mean from a quantum physics sort of way, where a lot of our reality actually lies. So, you know, it's a great question to suggest.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

We have mapped less than 10% of the ocean floor. Are these things, could they be from outer space? Sure. Could they be interdimensional? And I don't mean interdimensional in kind of a woo-woo sort of way. I mean from a quantum physics sort of way, where a lot of our reality actually lies. So, you know, it's a great question to suggest.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

Like traveling through black holes that we might not even see yet. Absolutely, quite possible, right. We are learning more about space and time and the relationship that space and time is flexible. It's compressible, it's stretchable.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

Like traveling through black holes that we might not even see yet. Absolutely, quite possible, right. We are learning more about space and time and the relationship that space and time is flexible. It's compressible, it's stretchable.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

Like traveling through black holes that we might not even see yet. Absolutely, quite possible, right. We are learning more about space and time and the relationship that space and time is flexible. It's compressible, it's stretchable.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

So it is, but here's the problem. Let's say this is a Russian, for example, Russian technology. That would mean that despite all the billions of dollars that we invest into our intelligence community, someone somewhere has developed this technology in secret, has been able to deploy it over our controlled U.S. airspace, and there's not a darn thing we can do about it.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

So it is, but here's the problem. Let's say this is a Russian, for example, Russian technology. That would mean that despite all the billions of dollars that we invest into our intelligence community, someone somewhere has developed this technology in secret, has been able to deploy it over our controlled U.S. airspace, and there's not a darn thing we can do about it.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

So it is, but here's the problem. Let's say this is a Russian, for example, Russian technology. That would mean that despite all the billions of dollars that we invest into our intelligence community, someone somewhere has developed this technology in secret, has been able to deploy it over our controlled U.S. airspace, and there's not a darn thing we can do about it.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

So that would be equivalent to the greatest intelligence failure this country has ever endured, eclipsing that of even 9-11 by an order of magnitude. Right.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

So that would be equivalent to the greatest intelligence failure this country has ever endured, eclipsing that of even 9-11 by an order of magnitude. Right.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

So that would be equivalent to the greatest intelligence failure this country has ever endured, eclipsing that of even 9-11 by an order of magnitude. Right.

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

Will, let's look at it temporally, right? So let's 1950s. There's documentation right now that anybody can go out and look at from the U.S. government from 1950s, early 50s that we've been dealing with this. Now, where were we? We had just entered the atomic age. We had barely broken the sound barrier, and we hadn't yet been into space. Where were the Chinese?

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

Will, let's look at it temporally, right? So let's 1950s. There's documentation right now that anybody can go out and look at from the U.S. government from 1950s, early 50s that we've been dealing with this. Now, where were we? We had just entered the atomic age. We had barely broken the sound barrier, and we hadn't yet been into space. Where were the Chinese?

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

Will, let's look at it temporally, right? So let's 1950s. There's documentation right now that anybody can go out and look at from the U.S. government from 1950s, early 50s that we've been dealing with this. Now, where were we? We had just entered the atomic age. We had barely broken the sound barrier, and we hadn't yet been into space. Where were the Chinese?

SmartLess
"Luis Elizondo"

Well, they're in the middle of a famine. And where was Russia? They were just developing the atomic bomb for themselves, still using, you know, proverbially horse-drawn buggies to deliver it. So that would be like walking into King Tut's tomb for the very first time in the 1920s. and discovering a fully assembled 747 jet plane sitting inside the tomb. It doesn't make sense.