www.facebook.com www.coasttocoastam.com Former White House/Air Force One engineer for ABC News, Wilbur Allen has been a contactee since childhood when he was implanted. In recent years, he has forensically documented sightings and anomalies through photography. Describing his first abduction at five years old, he said the grey ETs looked like they had the physique of small, slender children. The entities use a technology that applies a dampening field to the human brain, preventing abductees from screaming or running away, he reported. In repeated abductions (which he said were accomplished via a transporter technology) he found himself on a gurney in a darkened space, being looked at by hybrids. The implant he received at an early age made him physically ill for the first 18 years of his life, he revealed. Allen, who lives in the Washington DC area, said he is given mental cues to take photographs at certain locations. While he doesn’t always see anomalies with the naked eye, what he believes are craft consistently show up in his photos, some of which are taken at 1/8000th of a second, suggesting that some of the activity is occurring at speeds too fast for the human eye to see. At the US Capitol, he saw small green luminous orbs, as well as larger ones the size of a VW Beetle. He described one of the objects he photographed in DC as having plasma-like qualities, and oscillating in three dimensions simultaneously, before exiting in a “stargate.” He witnessed “non …
In “Secret History of the Credit Card,” FRONTLINE® and The New York Times join forces to investigate an industry few Americans fully understand. In this one-hour report, correspondent Lowell Bergman uncovers the techniques used by the industry to earn record profits and get consumers to take on more debt. “The almost magical convenience of plastic money is critical to our famously compulsive consumer economy,” Bergman says. “With more than 641 million credit cards in circulation and accounting for an estimated .5 trillion of consumer spending, the US economy has clearly gone plastic.” Millions of American families use their personal, general-purpose credit cards such as Visa, Mastercard, American Express and Discover to make ends meet; credit cards have been a discreet lifeline for families in financial straits. But other consumers, like actor and author Ben Stein, use plastic purely for convenience. While it would appear that Stein — who says he charges a small fortune every month on his credit cards — is the ideal customer, in reality, he is what some in the industry call a “deadbeat.” That’s because he pays his balance in full every month. The industry’s most profitable customers, the ones being sought by creative marketing tactics, are the “revolvers:” the estimated 115 million Americans who carry monthly credit card debt. Ed Yingling, incoming president of the American Bankers Association, tells FRONTLINE that revolvers are “the sweet spot” of the banking …
Description taken from www.coasttocoastam.com Filmmaker Bradley Lockerman and the “Godfather of Free Energy” Professor John Searl discussed Searl’s invention of a magnetic generator and how he believes the device could save our planet from economic and environmental disaster. “Scientists are ‘yesterday people,’” Searl declared, “but inventors are a special group of people who see the future and they bring the future out into reality.” Lockerman, who has been investigating Searl’s research since 1994, called the inventor’s tale “the wildest story I’ve ever heard in my life.” Recounting his remarkable story, Searl detailed how he first conceived of the device via a series of recurring dreams. Years later, he assembled the early prototypes of the invention and saw that it mysteriously floated, non-stop, upwards. Eventually, Searl managed to develop a means of controlling the device. It was during this time that sightings of his experiments in England were dubbed ‘UFOs’ by an unsuspecting public as well as the newspapers who knew of his work but desired to keep it under wraps. Should the technology ultimately be used to create a vehicle, he claimed that it could travel from London to New York in 15 minutes and a trip to the moon or the ISS would be the equivalent of “a bus ride.” On why the device has yet to be harnessed by companies or governments, Searl explained that one issue surrounds ownership of the creation because “once they see it, they want to own it.” As such …