Full episode: kzbin.info/www/bejne/d5KnomudbK58lac Danny Jones Podcast channel: www.youtube.com/@Koncrete Annie Jacobsen is a Pulitzer Prize finalist and New York Times bestselling author. Her newest book Nuclear War: A Scenario looks deep into the heart of the nuclear military establishment & is based on dozens of exclusive new interviews with military and civilian experts who have built the weapons, have been privy to the response plans, and have been responsible for those decisions should they have needed to be made.
@ricknelson25389 ай бұрын
❤
@2tearsinabucket5219 ай бұрын
Terminator and the matrix are the same book written by one woman stolen by the cia and fbi
@glen.simpson7 ай бұрын
I thought it was the DIA and Office of naval intelligence...... but my way back machine broke
@dragonfly-f5u7 ай бұрын
x-company or x-factory moonshot thats what she talking about google
@CantonBn6 ай бұрын
Danny, she made a number of misdirecting statements. Implying that Eisenhower Sec Def Neil McElroy was merely and advertising executive is silly. He was a Harvard educated economist, and economics is a science. He worked at P&G (Proctor and Gamble) overseeing for a while their brand management division, but rapidly went onto general senior management and became CEO/President of P&G as it became one of the biggest multinationals in the world through a decade of stupendous growth. As military historians know, Eisenhower had his own deep expertise in military matters, and he was intentionally disinterested in putting a military man in charge of DoD and preferred an expert manager for good reason. Per wikipedia: Given his background in the industry, and given President Eisenhower's predominance in defense matters, McElroy's appointment was not unusual. " Also what DARA does in the main is direct funding of academic research, just as similar agencies of top tier countries do.
@oldmanh45403 ай бұрын
I’m 87 have been researching this subject since 1980.Annie Jacobensen is one of the most truthful and highly erudite investigative reporters. I have read her books Nuclear War and Area 51. To all you young pups out there read her books,at least one. These black ops and deep black ops is where billions of our tax dollars go and do not have to be accounted for!
@Gunnumn3 ай бұрын
Her books are fantastic. People give her a lot of crap for writing hyper inflated peaces, but i look at it through the lense of her craft. She's an expert writer. She writes in a way the rewards the reader for sticking through until the end and will leave you with something on the back of your mind. I want to read her latest book about nukes.
@Davido5018 күн бұрын
Absolutely 👍🏻 💯 🙏🏻 🙏🏻 🇺🇸
@AlexanderLouvaris-l6i8 күн бұрын
Once the govt "sub contracts" to the private industry those entities don't have to disclose anything or account to the public
@Meursault10939 ай бұрын
Is it just me or does anyone else find her voice mesmerizingly beautiful?
@abemartinez96239 ай бұрын
The first thing I noticed about her when she was on Rogan. I love her voice
@FormerVicePresidentDickVeiny9 ай бұрын
If she stopped constantly saying "riiight?"
@amendtheman9 ай бұрын
Idk, I’d say I find it beautifully mesmerizing
@stratman1039 ай бұрын
Ha!! I thought the same thing when she was on Joe Rogan.
@princessthunderballs79199 ай бұрын
Just you bud
@DeanOliver19649 ай бұрын
This woman could read aloud the phonebook and I'd listen to it. What a wonderful voice.
@huwhitecavebeast19729 ай бұрын
You are easily duped then. Because her voice is contrived and she full of sh!tt half the time. She is speaking in a measured way she was trained to speak in. Once you know how this stuff is done it's very easy to spot and very irritating.
@timmyjones19219 ай бұрын
Me too Dean.
@larry73979 ай бұрын
I wonder if she does audio books. 🤔
@kevind11839 ай бұрын
She does the reading for her own books@@larry7397
@normanmacfarlane67249 ай бұрын
I read her books and I agree
@pfrstreetgang75118 ай бұрын
I knew about NRO in high school in the 70s. Amazing what you would overhear sitting and waiting for your mom to get off work at the Air Force Academy.
@dakf6605 ай бұрын
Your mom must have sucked at her job
@scottbrown81799 ай бұрын
Here are the ‘17’ US Intelligence Agencies, as alluded too: 1. Office of the Director of National Intelligence 2. Central Intelligence Agency 3. National Security Agency 4. Defense Intelligence Agency 5. Federal Bureau of Investigation 6. Department of State - Bureau of Intelligence and Research 7. Department of Homeland Security - Office of Intelligence and Analysis 8. Drug Enforcement Administration - Office of National Security Intelligence 9. Department of the Treasury - Office of Intelligence and Analysis 10. Department of Energy - Office of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 11. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency 12. National Reconnaissance Office 13. Air Force Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance 14. Army Military Intelligence 15. Office of Naval Intelligence 16. Marine Corps Intelligence 17. Coast Guard Intelligence
@michaelboskovich69488 ай бұрын
17 = Q
@wettham7158 ай бұрын
Oh ok thanks. We can all be safe and sleep well then !!!???😅
@pauldirac8088 ай бұрын
The land of the free is not America .
@colettelane17368 ай бұрын
Thank you 👍
@boborzech33678 ай бұрын
So basically all of them....
@WongGame7275 ай бұрын
Alex Jones once said something like, “you’re living in the now, DARPA is living 30+ yrs in the future.” The top war fighters, those small select groups who you don’t know exist are using the tech DARPA develops for testing.
@chrys30734 ай бұрын
They are covertly using it against innocent US citizens and TARGETED INDIVIDUALS! #JUSTICE FOR TARGETED INDIVIDUALS
@mikegreenguitar9 ай бұрын
Anne Jacobsen is so bright and well spoken. Her pace is measured and controlled. The contrast between her and the interviewer doesn't work to his advantage; he comes off as a little ADHD. In several places, without actually interrupting, he doesn't allow the guest to complete a thought. Not that he asked me, but he would do well to listen to world class interviewers like Rogan or Jocko to get a sense of their timing. When you have a guest of this caliber, it's alright if they do most of the talking.
@grossindecency6 ай бұрын
I think she's very gullible. Some of the things she claims are credible are anything but.
@donnavaughn94096 ай бұрын
I'm just glad she was interviewed, I don't tend to critique a person that isn't a professional trained news person.
@westall19666 ай бұрын
Rogan talks a little too much too.
@timweaver7826Ай бұрын
Rogan? LOL!!! The guy is an idiot who is stoned almost every interview.
@ronjon79425 ай бұрын
I love Ms. Jacobsen. She is so earnest, well spoken, well researched, well respected, articulate…
@flips119 ай бұрын
I lived next to DARPA headquarters for two years. I didn’t realize it when I moved in. I knew about them because I had done a literature review on one of their projects when I was in undergrad. I did find out a lot of cool declassified stuff by talking to the people that lived in my building who worked there
@emeraldfox71759 ай бұрын
Bull 💩!
@superdude17596 ай бұрын
I lived inside DARPA in a broom closet with a microwave, hot pockets, a microphone, a spy camera and spiral notebook! How ya like me now! 👻
@Spadeparade-xu9jl2 ай бұрын
Well… intrigue us with a story or two! I’ll go first since I know some people, not in darpa but in other positions. Just for clarification on how I know, I was in the military and became a pilot later and it’s a small world in aviation. Ok so here it goes, you’ll never see the “new” planes . You only see things that are 3-4 generations behind. We don’t introduce anything new to the public unless our enemies come out with something that beats or is close to beating the current “released” plane and technology. Also yes, Area 51 is a “test base” but it’s not the only one, it’s identifier is KXTA (Homey). The other unmarked base to the south is S4 or Yucca airstrip. If you follow the roads around you’ll see buildings like U1a, Lockheed/Skunkworks buildings, etc. what you won’t see is everything under the sand and rock. They don’t bring out the “Big LACtose Kilts / PLANEtS until after dark and they aren’t equipped with ADSB and are stealthy so you basically just have to witness it for yourself. What you could do is have someone take you up close to those places at night just outside of the restricted areas in a plane like a turbo cirrus and bring your camera with a crazy lens on a harvest moon or full moon and you may be able to get some pictures but there is an easier way to do it, I just don’t want to expose how to see them in person. I just don’t speak on it because then they’ll fix it and I won’t get to see them anymore lol I’ll give you a hint though, what was right and wrong about the SR-71 and how did they deal with it? if you can figure out how they dealt with it you’ll know how I know they’ll be operating and then you’ll have to figure out how to be at the right place at the right time. And remember in the land of spec ops, schedules are extinct. Blue skies and tailwinds!
@-Cole_White-25 күн бұрын
@@Spadeparade-xu9jlneed better hints lol
@AidanZenie9 сағат бұрын
@@Spadeparade-xu9jlis this a reference to their overheating issues? Are you implying they test the stuff when it’s cold?
@lukenielsen83978 ай бұрын
Beware the "Military Industrial Complex!" -- Eisenhower
@MrChuckwagon558 ай бұрын
Too late.
@BAsed_AFro7 ай бұрын
@@MrChuckwagon55 = Covid jabs.
@twintwitch18 ай бұрын
DARPA. We were introduced to it in the TV series “Lost”.
@danmang9239 ай бұрын
DARPA is the place the military goes to when they want things such as invisible cloaking body armor and A.I. controlled combat robots.
@John-zc4rz5 ай бұрын
DARPA, is the military industrial complex you have heard about for so many years headed up by military think tanks and backed by black budgets. When I was about 20 years of age I was exposed to one of the think tank heads and he explained it this way there is no mistakes at this level. The military industrial complex is 20-200 years advanced to general public knowledge, all military applications are throughly vetted in private. He said we know the answers before you know the question.
@FordMrsonАй бұрын
They are part of cia though and cia was made by rockfellers so you know if you think darpa works for you americans and not for rockfellers i would say you are sleeping big time.
@JohnMandockАй бұрын
There was a guy on TV. That used to work for skunk works. He said that art military technology and technology in general is the equivalent to what you've seen in Star Wars and Star Trek. He says we've been there and done that. What does that tell you.
@FordMrsonАй бұрын
Now you remind me the black hats figures some people watch and think they were interdimensional beings could it be darpa holograms to make certain people to feel fear?
@TonyS-u7z8 ай бұрын
Without jumping on the bandwagon this woman genuinely has a calming factor to her voice. I could literally fall asleep listening to her talk.
@philip-at-tube23 күн бұрын
Definitely.
@jonathanrobertson34069 ай бұрын
In regards to 9/11, John Carpenter didn't suffer from a lack of imagination. Ever seen "Escape from New York"? If you watch the original, unedited version (any version before 9/11), you might be surprised. I think 9/11 wasn't so much a failure of imagination but a failure to understand man's capacity for evil.
@VicTor-gi7so9 ай бұрын
Homer knew
@JohnnyFukcup9 ай бұрын
Surprised by what?
@jonathanrobertson34069 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyFukcup Well, basically, the film depicted the highjacking of an airliner to conduct a suicide mission on lower manhattan, the twin towers being very prominent in the final scene before the aircraft struck. It was not the main plot, if I remember correctly, but simply a lead in. In other words, the concept of flying highjacked airplanes into buildings had been imagined a long time before 9/11, thus my conmment about it NOT being a lack of imagination that was the problem.
@MrChuckwagon558 ай бұрын
The failure to understand man’s capacity for evil is arguably the biggest weakness of the United States and the West. When I was a child I went to the Zoo in the middle of the Gorilla exhibit. Then I saw a huge cage with giant metal bars on it and on the top it said “the world’s deadliest animal.” I ran over as fast as I could to see what it was. I looked through the bars and saw a giant mirror and was looking at myself. I’ve never stopped thinking about it since then, because it’s so true and most people don’t even think about it.
@deecee28376 ай бұрын
For the brain-thought-controlled (by the MSM & our Gov) masses, the failure to understand their capacity for evil persists.
@snakeplissken30638 ай бұрын
The government says that no one could foresee flying airplanes into buildings, but the government had wargamed this exact scenario.
@rickb069 ай бұрын
Oh my goodness, HER VOICE IS A TREASURE! I would pay her several tens of thousands of dollars to narrate an inspirational script for me, goodness gracious!
@John-Johnson9 ай бұрын
Danny been watching since the Ben in the basement podcast from you going from drunk with hat rack with Matt cox to serious conversations is crazy growth in happy for you brother glad you put In the work and it looks like it’s work out great!
@rolisreefranch9 ай бұрын
You can’t just mention bio hybrids and say No more
I get it. DARPA is the real life Stark Industries.
@Thoughtful87 ай бұрын
Yup
@WongGame7275 ай бұрын
DARPA would make Stark look like General Motors.
@freedomring30225 ай бұрын
No. Stark industries is Lockheed Martin.
@oddlandstudios5 ай бұрын
More like hammer tech 😂
@Iwantalloftheinformation5 ай бұрын
We have to remember something about civilian corporate intelligence and developments
@Chemical_Truth9 ай бұрын
20 years ahead of the curve? So they already have AGI? Or even artificial super intelligence? That could possibly explain some of the weirder things going on these days.
@calikillz7149 ай бұрын
Nothing new under the sun
@lyrand64089 ай бұрын
The 'black programs' stuff is supposedly anywhere between 20 to 40 years ahead.
@robertclark9729 ай бұрын
You betcha !
@roynaidu23279 ай бұрын
Absolutely, you don't think they'll actually let ai or any military tech evolve in front of our very eyes...
@illuminati420G9 ай бұрын
its actually 50+ years ahead of the curve lol
@danhunt42248 ай бұрын
I've read all her books and they are incredible! Her research is methodical and in depth
@sheilaharmon97917 ай бұрын
What is her name And the name of the books
@elchappo13209 ай бұрын
I first heard about DARPA in metal gear solid
@kjohn10219 ай бұрын
Facts
@dmo8489 ай бұрын
Oh shit😂 that's nuts
@huwhitecavebeast19729 ай бұрын
I first heard about it when the internet became a public thing back in the early 90s.
@fabescolmsinc12009 ай бұрын
Metal gear solid: confirming military conspiracies from the 80s to this day lmaooooo Drones made their first appearances on metal gear solid
@christopherlegarda51647 ай бұрын
Same 😂😂😂.
@jairenesereno45199 ай бұрын
This lady is so freaking smart. I need to read all her books and watch all her interviews! I would love to meet her one day.
@Theboxingobserver9 ай бұрын
^@@Oren_Elran
@michaelbrantley88929 ай бұрын
I listened to her audiobook Operation Paperclip, whoa, she is smart as they come.
@Theboxingobserver9 ай бұрын
@@michaelbrantley8892 Dude...guys like this and Lex are grifters. They are scamming you.
@daraquinn52608 ай бұрын
How do you know she’s smart?
@oldgaffer92128 ай бұрын
@@daraquinn5260You can sort of tell no
@mytzlplk9 ай бұрын
If you read the X-Men books in 1982.... :) DARPA issue # 158 . Thanks, Chris Claremont and Marvel for broadening a young child's vocabulary and political awareness.👍
@Dra7419 ай бұрын
I foresaw 9/11 and I kept getting Visions while I was working at US Customs at the World Trade Center,
@margaretabendroth86588 ай бұрын
@@Dra741I believe you
@mikegeary80569 ай бұрын
Chris Carter could also foresee 911. The first episode of the Lone Gunman was about a rouge faction of the government flying planes into the twin towers to start a war in the Middle East. It came out a few months before 911. According to him the CIA gave him story ideas from time to time.
@livinginthisgalaxy79619 ай бұрын
Operation Northwood
@gregmatthews73609 ай бұрын
Stil no explanation for how WTC7 fell over at freefall acceleration, all structural supports collapsed simultaneously due to a couple of cardboard boxes burning on one of the levels. Also, a dude on the street outside called "pull it".
@bicboi19309 ай бұрын
@gregmatthews7360 yep. So many brainwashed people and an engineer I know that refuse the obvious to keep their delicate world view from being destroyed 😅
@michaeld13789 ай бұрын
Was just going to add the same, but you beat me to it.
@jgamez50239 ай бұрын
Another "coincidence" was in Mel Gibson's movie The Patriot which came out a year before. At the beginning of the movie Mel's character is building a rocking chair....he weighs it when he's finished and he says "9 lbs 11 ounces". I was like that's interesting.
@dylanz55989 ай бұрын
I mean, I'm one of those people who have never heard of Darpa before. I just now found out about them. That's f'ing crazy!!!!!
@MMXX_CE9 ай бұрын
There’s a list on the DARP wiki page of their past projects if you haven’t seen it. If this is new info to you please do come back here and update me on what you think after you read those.
@amanda15009 ай бұрын
Darpa created LifeLog, it was shut down then Facebook started. Coincidence?
@MMXX_CE9 ай бұрын
@@amanda1500 Unlikely considering DARPA shut down ARPANET when the Internet we know today went up.
@emeraldfox71759 ай бұрын
Damn son,you been living under a rock? I knew about them 20 yrs ago!
@MrChuckwagon558 ай бұрын
What about the high intensity high energy sonic impulse weapon now known as “Havana Syndrome?” Too embarrassing to admit now that it’s being used against us?
@bblackrice5 ай бұрын
Her intellect & soothing vocal is so captivating.
@alexr77529 ай бұрын
The KH-09 satellite with the film canister she talks about was first beautifully described to me by Sergeant Woods in Black Ops 2.
@willstorm83315 ай бұрын
Jacobsen always seems to be on the point of revealing focused hard facts it swings back to the same point over and over. Without the big reveal.
@Emjaybee_7 ай бұрын
Interesting clip in that at one point she is describing how no matter how high up the ladder everyone is just human with normal everyday problems and at a previous point explaining how one country needs to be 20 years ahead of “the enemy” (which in reality are just other humans with families and everyday problems in another area of the world).
@kiethmergard3 ай бұрын
My great grandfather worked on the Manhattan Project and grandfather worked on ARPANET. It’s pretty cool researching what DARPA does
@powercabel122 ай бұрын
Tell that to those that are experimented on.
@johnsondoeboy27729 ай бұрын
This lady is fascinating. I gotta get her book
@danhunt42248 ай бұрын
She has several books out and they are all mind blowing!
@VancouverCatDogLover9 ай бұрын
I love Annie’s voice
@charlieadams87019 ай бұрын
Annie, how did building 7 fall ?
@ThomasJones-sz3sx9 ай бұрын
Controlled demolition.
@erikeippel9 ай бұрын
Larry Silverstein admitted it was a controlled demolition….We had to pull it …on PBS a few days afterward.
@haddenindustries29229 ай бұрын
It wasn't vaccinated🤷🏼♂️
@studleydewrite29429 ай бұрын
Climate change.
@PaulHenreid9 ай бұрын
Controlled demolition. How does over 90% of the American public not even know a third building collapsed, let alone a building not hit by a plane?
@robbieracer32949 ай бұрын
So perhaps some of that stuff flying around in the skies, especially the no noise, black pyramid could possibly be DARPA? Would make sense why there hasn't been disclosure, especially if you have a craft using something other than traditional engines to fly
@acmr32159 ай бұрын
"some"?.......Try 99.8%
@MASONMAXEY229 ай бұрын
You think?😂 of course. They would much rather us believing in fake aliens than knowing what they are up to.
@acmr32159 ай бұрын
I've worked in aerospace manufacturing for 30+ yrs, I've also seen things can NOT be "man made" if you see something that's questionable or has you wondering then it's man made if you ever see one that isn't.....you will NOT question it.@@MASONMAXEY22
@jazz4asahel9 ай бұрын
Saw one of those over Philadelphia. I think I'll forever remain standing on my deck at dusk watching it all in slow motion.
@Pavel_Poluian9 ай бұрын
Yes, this technology was designed on our planet. It all started with James Pitts' "Sky Car" vibrating orthotopter umbrella, then the umbrella was closed with a dome and devices appeared according to the scheme of conventional electromagnetic vibrating speakers (membrane + inductance) - fragments of the membrane were found by a farmer in Roswell. Then they created piezoelectric thrusters, or with small dischargers on the surface (they glowed all over the body due to ionization of the air), and now they are planes with plasma propulsion panels (so they are angular - that is, with flat surfaces). Thousands of discharge cells are densely packed into motor panels - they shoot streams of plasma (railgun architecture - coaxial electrodes). The ionized air of the spark discharge is accelerated in the railgun chamber by the Lorentz force to enormous speeds - a kind of ramjet engine is obtained. Just imagine! - tens of thousands of small ramjet engines assembled in panels and launching plasma synchronously at a huge frequency (hundreds of kilohertz). Plasma jets form toroidal air vortices - this air cushion creates lift and acceleration.
@amgpete77359 ай бұрын
I did lose myself inside her voice , but the topic was keeping me focused .
@jasonavelar68639 ай бұрын
Danny been watching you for the longest since before mallah, bro love your pod but so long these Danny clips are perfect man. You’re def gonna be in Joe Rogan level now
@DrakeLarson-js9px7 ай бұрын
I got to know Barry Boehm and others in the high level of DARPA exceptionally well, RAND etc. ...your comments, in my opinion, is very accurate, (Richard Garwin however (I think) - was really Jon von Neumann) ... Boehm's book speaks volumes about secret (Gail Hurd went to Palm Springs high school ... etc. etc.
@tyronecox59769 ай бұрын
Lol,Darpa the most secretive military institution in the world,but someone gonna expose them on KZbin, classic.
@vcracing21 күн бұрын
They aren't that secretive. They have very secretive programs, but most of their programs are right out in the open and carried out by academic and commercial institutions.
@B-rad3039 ай бұрын
Annie is an interesting woman, and her voice makes my stress level go from 10 to around a solid 4 lol..
@rocook839 ай бұрын
"... and then try to game out how they could defend against them." Enter Dick Marcinko and Red Cell...
@MrChuckwagon558 ай бұрын
Unfortunately poor Dick was a victim of his own success, did the exact job he was paid to do, but did it too well and embarrassed the wrong people. His imprisonment supposedly weakened and scared future red cell teams from being too good at their job in fear of the same punishment as Dick.
@rocook838 ай бұрын
@@MrChuckwagon55Still seems to be a reoccurring theme...
@MrChuckwagon558 ай бұрын
@@rocook83 - It’s sad, and dangerous, because red cell teams are supposed to game out, find weaknesses in our defense (like if they were the bad guys) but if they get punished for being successful, then they won’t do their job obviously. Who knows, maybe if they didn’t punish red cell teams they would have thought out the possibility of 9/11 and prevented it IDK.
@TDNMAFT.9 ай бұрын
I like how she describes high ranking officials walking around “star struck” 😂😂
@waynepowers35858 ай бұрын
Some say they’re ahead of us 50 years
@Tuglife9126 ай бұрын
I’ve been knowing about the National Reconnaissance Office ( NRO ) for a while. They have went from KH-1 Corona Satellites to the newer KH-11 Kennen. KH is Key Hole. I also know about the National Underwater Reconnaissance Office ( NURO ) and DARPA ( Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency ) as well. I’ve got a lot of NRO Mission Patches and Challenge Coins. I’ve also got CIA Challenge Coins to include the one from Operation Jaw Breaker.
@TemplarX29 ай бұрын
You deserve more recognition, Danny.
@brettwassum34239 ай бұрын
I could sit and listen to her talk for hours reading a user diagram for a Marsal vane controller relay and actually listen to every word she says.
@masonhancock53509 ай бұрын
Public tech is 20yrs behind
@SpAzZzZz_9 ай бұрын
We are using literal aim bot scope technology automatically corrects the shot to hit
@paulbarclay41149 ай бұрын
@@SpAzZzZz_using 1400s tech*
@brandonmacon33179 ай бұрын
No shat. General public just getting stuff the military has had for decade
@livinginthisgalaxy79619 ай бұрын
Don't really believe that's still the case.
@lynnmyersiii25219 ай бұрын
Duh.. Hence Woke Culture.. but what if we never went to sleep.??😎
@andreusredloff22528 ай бұрын
She is PR pure and simple- controlled with some spicy takes.
@ancientwatchmanTV8 ай бұрын
Her voice is so soothing and comforting. ❤
@justininman55219 ай бұрын
20 years is the junior focus, 40 years is the advanced technology outlook
@cranny52379 ай бұрын
Human cloning began in the 40s during ww2. The technologies we have today are outdated technology from the military that have been downgraded for public use. ChatGPT might created 20 to 30 years ago and released in 2022.
@john_atco2 ай бұрын
The Korean War..early 1950,s..Use of Lighting, Sound, vision, Drugs etc..Brainwashing techniques..Many things came out of that conflict..Many people are unaware of that war and its consequences today. It is almost like it has been erased from history..We only know part,s of what was going down back then. Combined with ww2...a lot.
@gopherchucksgamingnstuff22636 ай бұрын
I played the Division. One of the issues we had to deal with was a rouge Contractor breaking into to DARPA labs.
@buddapudgie84824 ай бұрын
Were they Chinese perhaps? Lol. 🤣
@Ssesay089 ай бұрын
This is technology world we are living, it’s difficult to hide from an other superpower countries when they are also well equipped with modern technologies and also have their own secrecy of powerful technology, let bygones be bygones. Let peace prevail in the world.
@cloudflex48197 ай бұрын
It’s so terrifying
@joe_86995 ай бұрын
Now after seeing videos of her speak I cant, but hear her voice in my head as I read. Her books are great. Deep rabbit holes to go down.
@southernstacker73158 ай бұрын
Who built the giant black triangle I saw fly over me at 1:30 am in 2006 fort worth TX?
@arjankapo24664 ай бұрын
Human Made. U still no understand who build? No Aliens mate.
@mitchellmiller97293 ай бұрын
You saw nothing 😊😊
@MrG777 ай бұрын
Annie is so smart and her voice is so soothing. She could read a chinese phonebook and i would listen.😭
@carlosdasilva86229 ай бұрын
Heard they also worked on MRNA
@MrChuckwagon558 ай бұрын
That’s been around since the 70’s but was never used because of the side effects. Of course Covid changed all that.
@johnf62676 ай бұрын
sure. its a weapon
@charliePhillips839 ай бұрын
I like her take on the whole ufo subject. I used to be a huge believer, but these last few years have waken me up
@PlanetJimmer8 ай бұрын
Well, if what many insiders say is true the objects she (and you) attribute to DARPA may be reverse engineered "alien" craft.
@PaulRandle-sc8qk8 ай бұрын
"Most people haven't heard of DARPA"!?!? WTF, DARPAnet was the original name of the Internet.
@_jriggfit_7 ай бұрын
Ive listened to every single book she has on audible. Love all of them.
@asdfgh-uh6cy9 ай бұрын
Anyone else first heard about DARPA from either Metal Gear Solid, or the history of the internet?
@davidpower11364 ай бұрын
Agreed her voice is as smooth as butter, what a soothing tone she has 😴😴😴❤
@boshmow36009 ай бұрын
She's very knowledgeable and knows her shit. She probably knows the truth about how advanced darpa projects are. It's not 20 years. It's 75 to 100 years ahead.
@boshmow36009 ай бұрын
@@busterbiloxi3833 I know. I was being kind.
@Thoughtful87 ай бұрын
Their actually a bunch of monkeys playing with offworld tech cross engineering the tech because they can't unlock its full potential.
@Thoughtful87 ай бұрын
They also have flying craft as well
@JohnMandockАй бұрын
A guy that worked for skunk work said that if you've seen Star Wars and Star Trek, we've been there and done that. We're so far in the future, people won't believe it.
@christianporter36388 ай бұрын
I knew a retired officer that told me about ARPANET back in 97' and how it was the precursor to the internet. Thats when i got interested
@theStacyJames6 ай бұрын
I'm still waiting for the explanation of Bio Hybrids
@PACKYCSONE808 ай бұрын
She narrates herr own audiobooks btw. All of her books are gold
@billy_fred9 ай бұрын
this woman is a hero in her own mind
@huwhitecavebeast19729 ай бұрын
Exactly.
@MrChuckwagon558 ай бұрын
She knows a fraction of what she thinks she knows.
@oldgaffer92128 ай бұрын
Naff off
@billy_fred8 ай бұрын
@@oldgaffer9212 eat piss
@MichaelRoy-hc3lz8 ай бұрын
First view of DJ, enjoyed interview. Liked and subscribed
@myrants58369 ай бұрын
I love Annie Jacobsen. I find her mesmerizing to watch and listen too. She is an incredibly articulate women with amazing contacts, knowledge and she does amazing research. Ive really enjoyed her books too. She is brilliant.
@EnkiTheAlmighty5 ай бұрын
I heard about DARPA in 1998 in Metal Gear Solid. I was still a kid but I understood they were a big deal. I actually believe that in an all out war DARPA would deploy a Metal Gear inspired weapon
@ejaygerald78777 ай бұрын
Star Wars and Star Trek are Cold War 1970s to 1980s. As well as Terminator. But then again, so are Harry Potter and Fantastic Beasts.
@ColtCommander458 ай бұрын
What an amazing researcher. For those commenting on her voice, she reads her own audio books - added bonus.
@chrys30734 ай бұрын
Has anyone heard of TARGETED INDIVIDUALS? I Am trying to create awareness. We are being tortured by US Govt and we need help. We need others to stand with us against these crimes against humanity. #JusticeforTARGETEDINDIVIDUALS
@dmo8489 ай бұрын
No wonder why I'm highschool on 2000 they said kids later on would carry 1 page instead of books to class. Basically a tablet or laptop they were talking about.😊
@pikiwiki4 ай бұрын
before she wrote the book, most people had not heard of darpa. so true so true
@MrWilderNapalm9 ай бұрын
FEMA was the most powerful. I was attached to them twice my career for disaster relief when I was a project manager for the Transportation Cabinet. Their power in time of national emergency was absolute.
@westhompson57429 күн бұрын
This comment didn’t age well
@dennyclark49549 ай бұрын
Great show and channel!
@aarvajal19539 ай бұрын
Extraterrestrials working with darpa, explains their technology advances.
@ZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA17 ай бұрын
„explains“ 😂
@SportsIncorporated9 ай бұрын
I always thought we went to space so we could invent Tang.
@paulalvey28529 ай бұрын
I love Tang. It's what the astronauts drink
@randykreifels61719 ай бұрын
Don't forget Pillsbury food sticks
@jublywubly6 ай бұрын
It's interesting that she mentioned Skynet from The Terminator. The writers of The Terminator didn't invent Skynet. It was actually directly coped from an earlier movie called Colossus: The Forbin Project. Even a bunch of the dialogue that Kyle Reese said to Sarah Connor about Skynet was nearly word for word the same as a character in Colossus.
@brassorchids88606 ай бұрын
Not surprising, since Cameron was successfully sued for stealing the story/concept for Terminator from sci-fi author Harlan Ellison.
@complexity55459 ай бұрын
Good video but DARPA's mission statement is not some secret unattainable group. DARPA has always been around. Its just scientists who play with physics and tech building stuff at colleges. Then the government ask/funds them to make their creations. It consists of regular folks/citizens but the project might become classified when it becomes an apparent extreme asset/weapon/drug/good. Its not some unattainable secret. My first year in engineer, we had to learn how missiles worked during a particular war and learn the pitfalls and write programs for it. Just become a engineer or scientist. The projects/research are usually located at colleges. This stuff is not a secret. In college I was apart of non-disclosure process. Engineers know this stuff. I encourage USA citizen to be apart of it too. They do a background check on you, to see if you faithful and not a criminal. There are alots of good people initializing projects. DARPA funded the internet.
@paulmitchell53499 ай бұрын
Good people ?
@anamericanentrepreneur8 ай бұрын
Cool interview
@Teflonchxpo8 ай бұрын
DARPA Created the World Wide Web.
@michaelmancini57738 ай бұрын
Incredibly fastenating interview , thank you for ,letting her just speak, she’s so compelling, gotta get that book, the woman is captivating in her comments
@commonsense35059 ай бұрын
Space Force was the 18th addition to the intelligence agency.
@RaulV227 ай бұрын
Project EATR is one of the craziest and scariest things I’ve seen coming out of DARPA. On a side note, I curious how close agencies like DARPA work with military groups like the 4th and 8th Army Psyops groups.
@Undergroundbase-r1x9 ай бұрын
At groom lake they are 300 years ahead of anything we can imagine
@JohnMandockАй бұрын
How do you know where did you find that out at? And i've heard similar things
@Undergroundbase-r1x27 күн бұрын
@@JohnMandock @JohnMandock old documentary i forget but i dont even think it was alien related talking about how the RAM coating on stealth craft is still classified china Russia even cant figure it out I heard the workers cant remember anything once they leave the base due to some strange symbols on the walls programs and deprograms people. When they leave or return they have security that watches security. They have scales at every door to let people in and out (shape shifters ? lol ) they also scan the bones in your hand. Some times they will jack knife semi trucks create car crashes to shut down hi way to move secret stuff on lo boys . Trillions of dollars missing must be doing something. sky Quakes caused by massive space vehicles restocking secret space fleet. please look up john lenard walson. he has a inferred telescope mod captures space vehicles on camera. i think they have gone far beyond burring up old dinosaurs. so for the verbal onslaught no one will listen to me in real life ! check my page i have a a good play list of ufo/black budget stuff no new crap
@FreqsandVibes5 ай бұрын
Absolutely accidental ASMR her voice got my brain and spine all tinglingly ✨✨✨
@aztro1879 ай бұрын
Best podcast hands down...
@d777b5 ай бұрын
Annie is a National Treasure!
@Teufel_Resen8 ай бұрын
When I was a kid in the 80s I played on a baseball team with a kid whose dad worked on the F-117 per my dad who was the coach talking to him at the time😂😂😂 He only described it as an aircraft that was invisible to radar as I remember it.
@Kevin-hl8zi3 ай бұрын
What a great radio voice she has. 👍
@mosesonamotorbike9 ай бұрын
DARPA is 20 years ahead of production and IARPA is 40 years ahead of research.
@kopparhast59219 ай бұрын
What’s IARPA?
@mosesonamotorbike9 ай бұрын
@@kopparhast5921 Intelligence Advanced Research projects Activity - responsible for leading research to overcome difficult challenges relevant to the United States Intelligence Community.
@mosesonamotorbike9 ай бұрын
@@kopparhast5921 www.iarpa.gov
@throwedoffTv9 ай бұрын
@@mosesonamotorbikenever knew that existed 😢
@mikemesser43268 ай бұрын
I found the part of her talking about hiring sci fi writers very interesting. I made the same suggestion to my site commander, a Major, back in 1982. I asked him who he would rather have to deal with the unexpected? The guy who is trained? Or the one who is trained and has imagination to think outside the box? A year later I made a proposal for expanding our intelligence effort - which was accepted - and the first "improvement" made several months later. Unfortunately no one listened to my advice about one thing and the improvement destroyed our efforts and had to be removed while they finally took my advice. Ancient history these days.
8 ай бұрын
You know Terminator & Matrix are not Cameron ideas...😂...cmon...
@guillaumemaurice35038 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing the video it was very interesting and fascinating. ❤
@Jammer4118 ай бұрын
MY SON WORKED AT AREA S4
@buddapudgie84824 ай бұрын
Really? Did he ever tell you anything about it? Did he see any UFOs or Aliens or anything? Thanks.