
Dames delivers stark warnings about an approaching series of catastrophic solar events he calls the "kill shot," predicting coronal mass ejections that could penetrate Earth's atmosphere and cause widespread destruction. He explains this is why SciTech relocated from California to Hawaii, citing the islands as a safer zone based on remote viewing data. He also discusses the use of a nuclear weapon on the Korean Peninsula as a precursor event.
The conversation takes a darker turn as Dames outlines what he calls the Devil's Workshop, describing an Iraqi biological weapons facility near Mosul and a plan to covertly release anthrax over Jerusalem using sun-dried gel containers. He closes with optimistic news about Project Starman, his effort to make contact with extraterrestrial civilizations using projected time-space windows.
Key Moments
A weapon test that blew Earth's atmosphere into space: Dames says the second reason he left the military was a Star Wars-era weapon so destructive it blew a Mount Everest-sized chunk of atmosphere into space with each test, and scientists were unsure Earth could regenerate it.
Korean nuke before the kill shot: Dames says his team has perceived for two years that the next nuclear weapon used in anger will be on the Korean peninsula, and that this strike will occur before what he calls the solar 'kill shot' - the catastrophic flare he expects to hit Earth.
The Devil's Workshop and Hezbollah anthrax plot: Dames lays out a remote-viewed scenario in which Hezbollah operatives smuggle agar-packed anthrax spores into hills above the Old City of Jerusalem, where the gel dries in the sun and releases a slow plume into the city - a plan he calls elegant enough to trigger Armageddon.
Project Starman and the rods are real: Dames says rod-like creatures, which he calls 'Aeolium' after the Greek god of winds, popped up at his Project Starman field site in Maui and represent an entirely new biological kingdom alongside plants and animals.
