Season 7, Episode 30
David Wilcock: All right. Welcome back to “Cosmic Disclosure”. I'm your host, David Wilcock, and I'm here with none other than Pete Peterson. So Pete, welcome back to the program.
Pete Peterson: Thank you.
David: We were talking in a previous episode about giant extraterrestrials that you said came here. And we ended on kind of a cliffhanger.
You said that to the best of your knowledge, there are crashes in Antarctica. And that the lowest of these crashes occurred where it was still a continent that did not have ice on it but was more like a tropical type of environment.
Could you tell us a little bit more about what happened there? And you had said something about people that were as high as 37 feet tall.
Pete: It's my understanding that some of the people from that . . . We call it the 'lowest crash' because it's deeper under the ice.
And along with . . . What happened was, there was a spaceship crash. You'd think that people with high technology would have less crashes, and they probably do. But when you think of coming across the galaxy and the fact that they are probably going to be . . . At that time, they probably didn't have time travel. Or they probably didn't have a way to put people to sleep with no degeneration over long periods of time.
David: Hm.
Pete: You know, there are many things that can happen. And as perfect as man, or modern man, or ancient man, or far more intelligent man than we are, builds things, they're still going to have problems.
There are electronic parts that you build them as good as you can. We've done tons of beautiful things for outer space.
We've built them up so that they won't be hit by micrometeorites. We've built them up for a number of reasons, but we still don't get everything. So it's natural that they would have crashes. We've had a lot of UFO crashes.
David: Do you think it's possible they were in a war, that they might have been shot down?
Pete: Well, now, there are always . . . there's always been wars. But there have been things like the terrestrial, in other words, the nearer a planet, navigation and steerage of a lot of these early craft were done based on magnetic lines.
Well, when you get near a pole, the magnetic lines, instead of being nice and parallel, and parallel to the surface, where you could go over the surface, the poles they bend in.