Whitley Strieber joins William Henry for a discussion of whether or not we are alone in the universe, and the secret meaning of Project Stardust. Hear Whitley’s unusual approach to this question. As a man who has often found himself face to face with the unknown, he has evolved some spectacular ideas about what man’s place in the universe might really be. Plus, William goes deeply into the ancient significance of stardust and what its being brought to earth for the first time might mean, in mythical and spiritual terms.

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New research shows how global warming caused by greenhouse gases can quickly disrupt ocean currents and lead to rapid climate change, as Whitley and Art Bell wrote about in their book The Coming Global Superstorm. In recent decades, frogs have been dying off rapidly and biologists have argued over whether this die off is due to global warming or to an invasive fungus. It turns out to be both.

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Ramona was buried today, one of the very hardest days of Art?s life. I am in the odd position of actually being able to imagine how he feels, because I went through it in some small way in the days after Anne fell ill a year ago October. I will never, ever forget how supportive he and Ramona were, and how good all of you were to me. When I really needed you, you were there with your prayers and your good wishes, and you have been there for Art, too, and I am so grateful for that.
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We recently wrote a news story about scientific puzzles that can’t seem to get solved but just won’t go away. One of these mysteries is dark matter, which can’t exist?but does. Astronomers think that dark matter is the “glue” that holds the universe together, except they can’t find any of it. But that doesn’t mean they’re not trying. They’re also studying another mystery known as dark energy.

Stephen Battersby writes in New Scientist that this mysterious force was created when the universe began. We know the universe is not only expanding, but is doing so at an accelerating rate. That means that dark energy can’t be a result of the Big Bang that supposedly was the beginning of everything, because if that was the case, the expansion would be slowing down.
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