The question of what actually happened as World War II ended has been an open one for years, and this week on Dreamland, controversial author Joseph P. Farrell joins Jim Marrs to talk about the possibility that what actually happened might have been very different from what history recorded, and might be having a profound effect on our lives today. Then Linda Howe interviews a scientist who explains that increasing Caribbean water temperatures threaten coral with extinction and the destruction of the marine food chain in the region.

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During Dreamland, Joseph Farrell brings up the issue of Nazi flying saucers, and mentions that one of them may have caused the December, 1965 Kecksburg, Pennsylvania UFO crash. Whitley Strieber and William Henry join Jim Marrs for a riveting discussion about the radical possibility that the object may have left Czechoslovakia in 1945 and appeared in Pennsylvania a few moments later–in 1965! And that’s just the beginning of a wildly fascinating discussion between Dreamland’s three great hosts about the secret realities and hidden powers that rule our world.

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Tuvalu is drowning. The island nation, which is located in the Pacific ocean between Hawaii and Australia, may be the first casualty of global warming.

In the US, we?ve had protest marches about proposed laws that would punish and try to keep out immigrants from Mexico and South America. As global warming causes the oceans to rise, low-lying islands like the nine islands that make up Tuvalu will probably become uninhabitable sometime in the near future.

Where will these people go? Many of them are now leaving, landing on the shores of Australia and New Zealand with few skills and their possessions in a bag, like the poor farmers from Oklahoma who fled to California during the Depression.
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Evolution isn?t just something that went on in the past, it’s still happening today. And some scientists think that evoltion plays out pretty much the same everywhere, meaning that alien life, when we find it, won’t be so different from us.

A group of geneticists at the University of Chicago have scanned the entire human genome in search of genetic variations that may signal recent evolution, and found more than 700 genetic variants occurred during the past 10,000 years of human evolution. To their way of thinking, that’s recent.
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