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Dark Journalist Daniel Liszt welcomes Project Avalon's Bill Ryan to the show.
Ryan first hit the spotlight a decade ago with his efforts at seeking out Secret Space Program whistleblowers and having them deliver riveting information live on video along with his research partner Kerry Cassidy on the early alternative series called Project Camelot.
Eventually Ryan split
with Cassidy and developed his own forum of research called
Project Avalon which tackles deep subject matter with an
informed community.
Ryan had his own
interactions with Goode before he went public and believes that
his story is unreliable.
Other analysts came
forward with remarkable disclosures about missing Government funds
and the outline of a completely hidden agenda.
A lot of this activity has centered around Corey Goode from Texas who claims to be a veteran insider of secret unacknowledged programs involving the military and space, but has offered zero evidence for this incredible assertion.
In fact, Goode has no
military record except a brief stint in the Texas State Guard, not
exactly known as a hotbed of deep intelligence activity.
Goode has rejected the suggestion saying that hypnotic regression is 'invasive.'
Without these evidentiary
methods being employed to verify his memories and with no evidence
being presented to support his story, Goode's account of being in a
secret program appears to be falling apart.
The event raised the
spectre of a covert effort that was draining trillions of dollars
from the US budget and siphoning them into a Complex Space Endeavor
for private interests.
It was pumped into the
alt-research community by a series of TV episodes they developed for
their select audience featuring Interviews with Goode by host
David Wilcock.
He has even developed a
Comic Book Series of his ET communications with what he calls
'a Sphere Being Alliance.' Goode's story not only sounded like a
Sci-Fi fantasy adventure, it also created a new version of a cult-like alien called a 'Blue Avian' with blue skin and feathers.
Respected authors like
Joseph Farrell and Richard Dolan were shocked to see their
research shabbily
recycled in a sensationalist and histrionic
fashion.
Ryan wonders whether all of this hyperbole being presented with no corroborating evidence is a concerted activity meant to replace legitimate inquiry with Sci-Fi adventure tales mixed with faux New Age psychobabble.
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