
Thompson describes a life-changing near-death experience after his car flew off a 250-foot cliff at 70 miles per hour during an El Nino rainstorm. Photographs of the destroyed vehicle and a newspaper article confirm the crash, with a responding officer stating decapitation should have been inevitable. Thompson credits his survival to spiritual intervention and says the NDE opened his awareness to visions of an upcoming pole shift and the existence of cave systems traversing the Earth's mantle.
He claims the hollow Earth contains tropical environments with 800-foot-tall trees, herds of woolly mammoths, crystal cities, and long-lived human tribes protected by a firmament atmosphere. Thompson says he was initiated as a shaman by a Hawaiian kahuna who was later killed in a collision with a government Humvee. He insists that intelligent beings within the Earth already know of his planned arrival and will guide him safely through the passage.
Key Moments
May 24, 2003 - flying into the North Pole hole: Art lays out the plan: on May 24, 2003, Dallas Thompson and an L.A. film crew will travel to the North Pole, find the hole reported by Admiral Byrd, then fly into it in a Solotrek personal helicopter to meet inner-Earth beings and find the crystal cities of Shambhala.
The hole is both physical and a dimensional portal: Pressed by Art, Thompson explains the polar hole is simultaneously a real physical opening and a dimensional portal - the energy entrance acts as a shield, and inside is a separate firmament atmosphere where time runs differently.
Inner-Earth humans live 1,700 years: Thompson claims hollow-Earth humans can live 800 to 1,700 years thanks to the firmament atmosphere shielding them from UV, infrared, and cosmic rays - and ties this to a biblical pre-flood firmament that 'melted' and caused Noah's flood.
Mechanical insect drones guard the polar hole: Asked about security at the hole, Thompson says agencies and armed forces patrol it with swarms of micro-mechanical flies - bee-sized drones with built-in cameras that look like real insects - alongside interdimensional protection.
Listeners call Thompson manic and delusional, on air: Art reads Fast Blast messages from the audience to Thompson's face: 'this guy is obviously manic and delusional,' 'this poor soul is a bipolar manic in his manic phase,' 'sounds crazy as a loony, makes JC sound normal.' Thompson responds, 'I send him love and light.'
