
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send a text
Start with a simple question: what if “impossible” flight is just unfamiliar physics? We take you from a headline-making interview with Rep. Luna to the dense but revealing world of Defense Intelligence Reference Documents exploring wormholes, negative energy, and zero-point concepts—then translate it into plain language you can use to think clearly about UAP reports. Along the way, we map how a space-time “bubble” could explain erratic motion, fuzzed imagery, right-angle turns, and the eerie silence witnesses describe.
We also confront the hard part: energy. Warping space-time would require staggering power, which is why the quantum vacuum and Casimir effect matter. If advanced craft can couple to that ever-present sea of fluctuations, fuel becomes obsolete and infrastructure transforms—no grids, no pipelines, just on-demand power and silent lift. That shift reframes what an advanced civilization leaves behind and why distance inside a galaxy stops being a meaningful barrier. Combine that with credible testimonies, bipartisan interest, and fresh promises of document releases, and you have a moment that calls for sober curiosity, not reflex dismissal.
Finally, we get practical. You’ll hear why some physicists separate information-only wormholes from traversable portals, how time differentials could produce “missing time,” and why ancient references to “windows in the sky” might reflect real phenomena viewed through older lenses. We share personal sightings, discuss the rising cadence of pilot reports, and argue for building intellectual and spiritual frameworks now—before public disclosures outpace our capacity to process them. If you care about science, faith, or just want a clear map through the noise, this conversation gives you tools, not just takes.
If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review so more curious minds can find us. Your support helps keep the search honest, grounded, and wide open.
Support the show
They that seek shall find
By Michael B. Rush4.9
329329 ratings
Send a text
Start with a simple question: what if “impossible” flight is just unfamiliar physics? We take you from a headline-making interview with Rep. Luna to the dense but revealing world of Defense Intelligence Reference Documents exploring wormholes, negative energy, and zero-point concepts—then translate it into plain language you can use to think clearly about UAP reports. Along the way, we map how a space-time “bubble” could explain erratic motion, fuzzed imagery, right-angle turns, and the eerie silence witnesses describe.
We also confront the hard part: energy. Warping space-time would require staggering power, which is why the quantum vacuum and Casimir effect matter. If advanced craft can couple to that ever-present sea of fluctuations, fuel becomes obsolete and infrastructure transforms—no grids, no pipelines, just on-demand power and silent lift. That shift reframes what an advanced civilization leaves behind and why distance inside a galaxy stops being a meaningful barrier. Combine that with credible testimonies, bipartisan interest, and fresh promises of document releases, and you have a moment that calls for sober curiosity, not reflex dismissal.
Finally, we get practical. You’ll hear why some physicists separate information-only wormholes from traversable portals, how time differentials could produce “missing time,” and why ancient references to “windows in the sky” might reflect real phenomena viewed through older lenses. We share personal sightings, discuss the rising cadence of pilot reports, and argue for building intellectual and spiritual frameworks now—before public disclosures outpace our capacity to process them. If you care about science, faith, or just want a clear map through the noise, this conversation gives you tools, not just takes.
If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review so more curious minds can find us. Your support helps keep the search honest, grounded, and wide open.
Support the show
They that seek shall find

1,536 Listeners

1,037 Listeners

1,200 Listeners

1,070 Listeners

1,841 Listeners

2,706 Listeners

10,988 Listeners

1,021 Listeners

612 Listeners

602 Listeners

1,591 Listeners

2,029 Listeners

840 Listeners

17 Listeners

43 Listeners