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Coast to Coast AM

Coast to Coast AM

George Noory

Coast to Coast AM airs on more than 600 stations in the U.S., as well as Canada, Mexico and Guam, and is heard by nearly three million weekly listeners. With hosts George Noory, George Knapp (weekend), and guest weekend hosts, it is the most listened to overnight radio program in North America. A media phenomenon, Coast to Coast AM deals with UFOs, strange occurrences, life after death, and other unexplained (and often inexplicable) phenomena. Coast to Coast AM is overnight talk radio with daytime ratings.

657 - Ayahuasca Healing Grand Canyon Mummy
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  • 657 - Ayahuasca Healing Grand Canyon Mummy

    Tom Boyle is a facilitator at ayahuasca ceremonies in Florida. In 2019, he had his first ayahuasca experience, which convinced him of the profound healing potential of this sacred plant medicine. Since then, he's been dedicated to guiding others on their paths to healing with ayahuasca and is currently writing a book that shares condensed stories of individuals' transformative experiences with ayahuasca. He joined guest host Connie Willis (info) to discuss that mission.
    Boyle provided an overview of ayahuasca, explaining its origins from the Quechua language and its significance as spiritual medicine. He emphasized that ayahuasca is illegal in the US but can be used legally within certain religious contexts. Boyle debunked the notion that one must travel far to experience ayahuasca, noting that ceremonies are conducted within the US, often accompanied by music and facilitated by visiting shamans from Peru.
    Boyle shared personal experiences with ayahuasca, including his initial skepticism, extensive research, and eventual participation in ceremonies. He recounted various encounters with the medicine, such as experiencing physical and emotional purges, encountering spiritual entities like Mother Ayahuasca, and witnessing profound healings in others. In addition, Boyle highlighted the diverse ways ayahuasca can facilitate healing, from physical ailments to deep-seated emotional traumas.
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    Stories of a mysterious network of vast caverns, brimming with weapons, statues, seeds, and other ancient Egyptian treasures, have been reported at the bottom of the Grand Canyon. Sharon Day, paranormal investigator, author, and popular blogger of "Ghost Hunting Theories" and "Groovy New Life," talked about the Grand Canyon Mummy site.
    Day recounted an intriguing historical account from the 1909 Phoenix Gazette which reported on the discoveries made by an explorer named G. Kincaid, who claimed to have stumbled upon a cave filled with mummies and artifacts while traversing the Colorado River. Drawing parallels with similar findings in Baja, Mexico, and Nevada, Day presented evidence supporting the authenticity of Kincaid's account. She discussed the significance of native legends and archaeological evidence in corroborating historical narratives, noting the importance of considering indigenous perspectives and oral traditions in understanding ancient cultures and events.
    Day also delved into psychometry, recounting experiences from a young age when she could intuit details about objects and the people associated with them. Growing up in a Civil War hospital turned home, she found herself drawn to artifacts and possessed a unique ability to sense the histories and energies surrounding them. This innate skill in psychometry led her to develop a deep understanding of human behavior and perspective. Day emphasized the value of storytelling and understanding the narratives behind every person and object encountered to promote empathy and understanding.

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    Mon, 29 Apr 2024 - 35min
  • 656 - Life in the Hells Angels

    George Christie, former president of the Ventura charter of the Hells Angels, joined guest host Connie Willis (info) for the entire 4-hour program to discuss his life in the world's most infamous motorcycle club, his time in solitary confinement, and how he uses his past experiences to help others.
    Christie reported on his involvement with the History Channel's "Outlaw Chronicles," revealing the show provided a platform for him to share his perspectives. Despite never watching the edited version of the series, Christie admitted he enjoyed participating in the show and appreciated the opportunity to tell his stories from a unique angle. He recounted a story of negotiating with the History Channel team while transitioning from prison to everyday life, noting the success of the show and its international reach.
    Christie shared insights into his identity as a motorcycle enthusiast and his journey from being a Marine to joining the Hells Angels. He outlined the origins of the outlaw motorcycle club in post-war America and his involvement with it in Southern California. Despite the club's controversial reputation and conflicts with law enforcement, Christie emphasized his perspective as a motorcycle enthusiast and outlaw rather than the public perception of the group as a criminal biker gang.
    He described his experience with solitary confinement during his time in jail. According to Christie, the conditions were harsh with a disciplinary diet of two meals a day and minimal contact with others. He expressed his belief that solitary confinement is inhumane and should be changed. Despite his past, Christie revealed he now works as a consultant, strategist, and advocate for various causes.
    Christie delved into his efforts to negotiate peace among rival motorcycle clubs, drawing from his experiences in prison and courtroom battles. He recounted instances of conflict resolution and the establishment of a moratorium on violence between clubs to maintain peace within the motorcycle community. He also spoke about his podcast, "Speak of the Devil," and upcoming book projects which delve into his ongoing efforts to share stories and insights from his life as a Hells Angel.

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    Sun, 28 Apr 2024 - 35min
  • 655 - Health & Disease Beliefs Transmedium UFOs

    Author Mark Gober has served on the board of the Institute of Noetic Sciences since 2019. He revealed that most people probably haven’t thought to question fundamental beliefs about health and disease. For example, do bacteria cause disease, or are they part of the body's cleanup crew that appears at the scene of an underlying toxicity or injury? Do researchers follow the scientific method when they claim to isolate viruses and show that they cause disease in their hosts? Gober told George he is skeptical of some of these claims and said he feels other scientists don’t focus enough on the intellectual and spiritual influences on health. “It’s difficult to challenge the materialist view of consciousness, which is the idea that consciousness is stuck in our skull,” he explained. “Much of what the Institute of Noetic Sciences looks at is the evidence that this is not true, and the implications (of that.)”
    Gober noted that he feels much of Western medicine, which employs an allopathic approach – or treating symptoms and diseases with drugs and surgery – “does not seem appropriate in terms of looking at health and disease.” While it’s “understandable for doctors who are dealing with many patients” who “just need to get that person well,” he continued, “from my perspective, we need to get to the root cause of why people are getting sick in order to try to figure out the appropriate remedies.” He said understanding consciousness is a big part of figuring out why folks get sick. “When I don’t see doctors talking about (consciousness), to me, it’s just a red flag,” he said. He explained that while most allopathic doctors think that consciousness is in the brain, and not something to be considered in treating illness that isn’t directly related to the brain, “if (consciousness) is more like a soul – which I think there’s a lot of evidence for that – then the body becomes a vessel for that soul.” Therefore, he claimed, consciousness needs to be considered in any treatment. But, unfortunately, “that’s not the way modern medicine typically regards health.”
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    Researcher and documentary filmmaker, Darcy Weir, has chosen to explore some of the most intriguing topics of discussion today, including UFOs and cryptids. He joined George to discuss his recent film, Transmedium: Fastmovers & USOs, as well as the mysterious world of NASA-related UFO encounters in space. Those topics included the role of SETI and the likelihood (or lack of) that they will actually receive or send a message that isn’t thousands of years old by the time it arrives, and the role of scientists like Seth Shostak who continues to work with SETI while discounting UFO evidence such as that disclosed by military whistle-blowers.
    Weir discussed his recent and upcoming documentary films on UFO phenomena as well. His most recent focuses in part on the phenomenon of USOs or Unidentified Submersible Objects – essentially UFOs that go under the water. He explained that he believes many submarines have encountered USOs, which they call “fast movers,” and even documented them on sonar. “It’s almost like an open secret that they’re noticing these operating in our oceans with superior speeds to anything we can operate,” he said. “A submarine goes a maximum of about 35 to 40 knots,” he continued, while a torpedo – creating an air bubble in front of it to reduce friction – can get up to 70 knots. But the items spotted on sonar move even faster; and unlike our technology, which is limited to either the air or the sea, these objects can readily move from air to sea and back again, making them truly transmedium. “They… exhibit the capability of moving from our oceans to our atmosphere to space with no friction, no regard for physics as we know them.”

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    Sat, 27 Apr 2024 - 35min
  • 654 - Food Laws & Health Phoenix Lights

    Attorney Scott Tips is the President and General Counsel for the world's oldest health freedom organization – the National Health Federation, and for 40 years, he has been specializing in food and drug law. In the first half, he shared updates on Codex Alimentarius – an international body where standards and guidelines are set for what we eat and drink, as well as the problems of soil depletion, and how we are being drenched in pesticides. Tips reported that just two meat processing companies now control 85% of the business and have squeezed out small and medium-sized producers. This is a trend being seen throughout the food industry, as well in the vitamin supplement business, where corporations have increasingly bought out smaller companies, he lamented.
    The consolidation of the supplement industry has led to a decrease in quality and potency, according to Tips, and profits have been prioritized over the original mission of the acquired companies to improve people's health. Regarding Codex Alimentarius, he suggested that their standards for food safety and agriculture are influenced by big agriculture and pharmaceutical companies, leading to harmful products being shipped globally despite regional concerns. At their meetings, he argued against the use of veterinary drugs like Zilpaterol, which increase the weight and musculature of cattle but are not healthy for the animals. Tips also revealed how Monsanto/Bayer (the makers of the herbicide Roundup) are writing & backing bills in state legislatures to stop people from suing them over harmful health effects from their products.
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    In the latter half, author and ufologist Dr. Lynne Kitei joined us on the 27th anniversary of the Phoenix Lights, which is deemed to be the most witnessed and important mass sighting in modern history. On the night of March 13, 1997, a variety of craft were seen over a 12-hour period in Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, and California, including a large triangular shape said to be a mile-wide or even longer by a considerable number of witnesses. In fact, according to some data, one of the craft was estimated to be eight miles wide, she marveled. The total number of witnesses is thought to include thousands of people, she said, including police officers, and celebrities like Alice Cooper, and Kurt Russell (who was piloting a private plane that night). "These massive craft or these formations of light...seemed to be attached to something [and as] people would look up...it would block out the stars," she detailed, adding that the phenomenon was totally silent.
    On her website, Kitei presents animations depicting the "parade of different craft and multiple orb formations attached to and separate from these craft." She also offers a survey for people to share their personal experience of the Phoenix Lights and related sightings. The survey results have so far shown that most of the Phoenix Light witnesses reported profound positive effects after the sighting-- what Kitei referred to as a kind of enlightenment or awakening. Intriguingly, many of the experiencers reported "encounters with some type of non-human intelligent being...both physical and non-physical, such as orbs and ghostly figures, and they communicate with telepathy."

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    Fri, 26 Apr 2024 - 34min
  • 653 - Libertarian Views Father Amorth, Exorcist

    James P. Gray was a trial judge in Orange County, California, starting in 1983, and the 2012 Libertarian candidate for Vice President. In the first half, he shared his views as a Libertarian, and weighed in on such issues as public education, homelessness, healthcare, taxes, and drug laws. Libertarians, he noted, believe that "you should be able to live your own life as you choose, as long as you don't wrongly impair other people to do the same thing." Now working as a private mediator in resolving disputes, he lamented that many in society have lost the ability or even interest in talking and working with each other to address and resolve issues, particularly of a political nature. One of the most critical issues facing America is that many public schools are failing our children, especially in lower economic areas, he commented. Parents should be able to choose where their government money will be spent for the education of their children, and that will bring competition back into the school systems, Gray suggested.
    He spoke in favor of an idea popularized by economist Milton Friedman-- negative income tax, where people who make very little or no money would receive a stipend yet would be incentivized to work rather than collect welfare. Regarding healthcare, Gray does not believe the government should be involved in implementing programs, as this has caused the medical system to be mired in costly bureaucracy. He thinks there should be vouchers for people who can't afford it, but they should choose how to use them rather than through a government vendor. Gray also discussed the problem of homelessness in cities like Los Angeles, and highlighted the need for more mental health facilities and the challenges faced by veterans in particular.
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    With a master's degree in religion from the University of Chicago, Michael Lichens focuses his work on overlooked aspects of spiritual life. In the latter half, he discussed the Catholic Church's most celebrated exorcist, the late Father Gabriel Amorth, how he became an exorcist, and some of the intense cases he was involved with. Amorth, who was based in Rome, conducted some 70,000 exorcisms over the years, Lichens estimated, though some of these were on the same person (the documentary, The Devil and Father Amorth, depicts him performing his ninth attempt to exorcise a woman named Cristina). One of the reasons Amorth became so well-known was his willingness to work with the media, he noted. One person Amorth worked with was said to be possessed by a staggering 1,000 demons, and in some cases, he worked with individuals for years trying to free them from demons.
    Lichens recounted how Father Amorth was initially reluctant to be an exorcist, but after six years of training, he began to take on solo cases in the 1980s. The Church would always try to rule out natural or medical explanations before conducting an exorcism on someone. Speaking of supernatural occurrences during an exorcism, Lichens detailed how the Father witnessed levitations on occasion, as well as had a direct encounter with Lucifer and was spit upon, with the spit turning into nails as it hit him. He also experienced freezing rooms, actually seeing ice form on the windows. A spiritual protege of Amorth was Padre Pio, who bled the stigmata in his hands, battled with demons, and was said to communicate with angels. Amorth said he sometimes felt the spirit of Padre Pio (who died in 1968) assisting him in exorcisms.

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    Thu, 25 Apr 2024 - 34min
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