[0:01:57 - 0:02:08] Sean, if I can say something just for a moment, this is an incredible honor and privilege of mine. And not for the reasons that most people might think not because.
[0:26:57 - 0:27:14] Let me ask you a question
Sean. Right on the heels of World War II, we have this rash of flying saucers being seen and UFOs that were in some cases raid our returns in the early 50s doing 10 to 13,000 miles an hour.
[0:37:29 - 0:37:44] Well, we, I think I mean, it's certainly possibility. You're right,
Sean. It is something we have to consider. But again, I go back to how is he talks about that? How, no, you're right. How is the T well because that gets into a very uncomfortable part of the conversation.
[0:42:18 - 0:42:44] And so the X 15 was and so when you compare that to objects that are doing 10,000, 13,000 miles an hour and we had barely broken 4,000 miles an hour with the X 15. Again, who had that technology and more importantly, who had that technology to deploy it over the United States because we were seeing these things and they've been reported over and over again since the late 1940s. There's a very interesting document.
Sean, I'll share with you.
[0:45:51 - 0:46:06] So I think
Sean you'd be really surprised to know that there's documentation, historical documentation, that substantiates what we've been dealing with and we've been dealing with it for quite a while. So if I have your permission, I'd like to read something out loud and let's do it.
[0:59:04 - 0:59:10] One is, let me ask you,
Sean, what do we use as humans? What is writing for? What do we use writing to do?
[1:13:25 - 1:13:30] that makes
Sean Ryan, who's
Sean Ryan, he is well, okay, but if you look at the neural pathways and
[1:13:42 - 1:13:48] So, that's all what separates us. What makes
Sean Ryan,
Sean Ryan, what makes
Sean Ryan willing to
[1:15:51 - 1:15:54] There's something else that makes
Sean Ryan true.
Sean Ryan is. And it's not your
[1:21:50 - 1:21:54] you can imagine if I were to ask you a question,
Sean, I say,
Sean, give me your,
[1:21:55 - 1:21:59] give me your simplest and less than a sentence, few words as possible. If I were to ask you,
Sean,
[1:22:16 - 1:22:21] It already happened. And by that same definition, if I asked you,
Sean, what's your definition of
[2:49:33 - 2:49:38] No matter where you're watching
Sean Ryan show from, if you get anything out of this,