Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
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The rescue of the US Air Force Colonel after ejecting from his F-15 over Iran used tech more advanced than any Hollywood writer could imagine. Here's what we know about the ghost murmur. When doctors detect a heart murmur, they're hearing a swishing sound, blood swirling around inside the heart.
When the combined forces of the US military rescued the F-15 pilot, once they neared his general location, they zeroed in on his precise position with tech that isolated the sound and electrical energy generated by the pilot's individual heartbeat. AI was able to disregard all other heartbeats and electrical interferences. It's called long-range quantum magnometry.
If what we think we know about this tech is accurate, the battlefield has changed forever. If your heart is beating, we can find you. Join a million folks who get my free newsletter. Sign up now at getchem.com. Next up, a call from my weekend show, The Kim Commando Show. Enjoy. You're being watched. Seriously, every time you go online, your internet provider is tracking your every move.
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Chapter 2: What advanced technology did Iran use to rescue the U.S. Air Force Colonel?
and then went back to it, out of curiosity, and then went back to it. And I thought, if that is a plane, wreckage-wise, there should be some other parts there, surely. And sure enough, 110 feet to the west was a half-exposed, what I believe is a radial engine, and a wheel, half-exposed wheel as well, which coincidentally fits with the actual aircraft type of the Electra, as Amelia said.
In between the two is what I believe is part of the exhaust section, where the aeroplanes come in to land, a false landing on the reef. The engines possibly come off after that would be the exhaust. So the sequence of these objects fits with what pretty much an old-fashioned stereotype aircraft would be. So, yeah, it was an interesting moment at the time.
What did you do with... with your thoughts. I mean, so many people have been looking for this plane over the years, right?
Yeah, absolutely. It's tricky, isn't it? Because you sit there and you think someone must know about that. Surely someone's seen that. I mean, please don't get me wrong. I can't 100% say it's Amelia's aircraft. And I can't 100% say it's an aircraft. So I'd have to go there. but it certainly looks like it and the maths suggest it is. But yeah, where do you go with that?
And being a pilot, you have to have an obligation to report something. I mean, nothing has gone missing there before. So I approached the NTSB and they referred me to the ATSB in Brisbane. They said it's their jurisdiction. So I filed a report with the ATSB and they come back and said, yeah, thank you very much, but it's the NTSB. So we never really got
So I fired off another email, and the HSB said, well, the government would have to approach us to look at it anyway, if that was the case. But to be honest with you, the HSB is still trying to get to the bottom of MH370, and this is historic, so it's not going to be at the top of that list.
What made you think to look in this area? Were you just blindly looking?
Yeah, I was just playing. I was actually off sick work at the time, so I had a lot of time to myself. So I was sitting there playing. What would I do if I was in that position in a light aircraft like that? And I thought, pick that area.
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Chapter 3: How does long-range quantum magnometry work in locating individuals?
Probably land it there. I could. And that was when I spotted a long shape. The first long shape I saw wasn't it. I come away and thought, you fool, what do you think you're doing? And then later on, I looked at it again, and it caught my eye, the cylinder that measures 12 metres. And that's where it started.
And it was right next to where I thought I would land the aeroplane if I was in that position.
Wow. You know what you need? You need Nicholas Cage from National Treasure. He'd be out there in the next two and a half hours.
Yeah. Absolutely.
So what are you going to do? I mean, has anybody else picked this up? Say, hey, you know what? Maybe, Justin, you're onto something. Maybe we should have looked at Google Earth maps all the time, the whole time.
Yeah. Yeah, I've had some contact with people. Some guys have written to me. Obviously, you've got skeptics, of course, absolutely. But I have been approached by a gentleman or a team of people who are interested in going to look. Go. To identify. I'll go. Let's go. We'll all go. Yes. You should go. Yeah, we all want to go. Yeah, we're keen to go.
The only problem is there's a lot of red tape around business in the island and, you know, doing what you do. So we would need a permit.
We'll go in the morning. They won't even know we're there. Yeah.
But wouldn't that be something, Justin? I mean, we've had how many countless investigations trying to find Amelia Earhart's plane on this little remote island in the South Pacific. And then you're sitting there in the UK going, got it.
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