Linda Moulton Howe interviews Robert Salas, who hosted the Disclosure Conference at the National Press Club on September 27 at which it was revealed that UFOs had on numerous occasions interrupted the functioning of US nuclear missile systems. During the interview, Whitley Strieber also points to an occasion when this happened in Russia.

This is an insider’s look at just what went on at that powerful press conference.

NOTE: This show summary, previously published on our old site, may contain broken links.read more

Whitley Strieber has written a new speculation about what might happen if aliens land. Thrill to this wonderful story, told as only Whitley can tell it.

He calls his story "The Good Neighbors." Or ARE they?

This is Whitley Strieber at his riveting best. Don’t miss this one!

read more

But NOT Fox News! – In an era when ideologically based news programs are proliferating, media scholars and political observers have expressed concern that television programming may be polarizing American voters. But the increased availability of entertainment options may be a bigger problem.

Political scientist Kevin Arceneaux says, “We should be less concerned about Fox or MSNBC turning us into polarized voters and more concerned that with the fragmentation of the media, people can wall themselves off from news completely and just watch entertainment.” In other words, they can tune out–By allowing people to insulate themselves from divergent viewpoints, cable television is polarizing the mass public into opposing camps.
read more

At a time when American military forces are stretched thin overseas and people who wouldn’t ordinarily considered joining up need jobs, a growing number of potential recruits are too fat to enlist. This is a shame, because there are things you can only learn by being a soldier. Subscribers can still listen to this show.

In the past half-century, the number of women of military age who exceed the US Army’s enlistment standards for weight-to-height ratio and body fat percentage has more than tripled. For military-age men, the figure has more than doubled. As of 2007-08, 5.7 million American men and 16.5 million women of military age were ineligible for duty because they were overweight or obese.
read more