🚨The Company Summoning UFOs From the Sky🚨Are we finally cracking the code behind the UAP mystery? In this episode of American Alchemy, Skywatcher (James Fowler)—a civilian engineer with advanced sensors and rare access to high-level programs—joins me to expose what traditional radar and government filters miss. From anomalous craft with instantaneous acceleration to military pilots openly describing “reverse gravity” and silent propulsion, this conversation touches on evidence that something not made by humans is flying in our skies. Part scientific breakdown, part spiritual reflection, Skywatcher challenges the boundary between classified physics, public disclosure, and metaphysical reality.
Key Revelations:
Skywatcher’s Sensor Systems:
- Fowler has developed proprietary sky-monitoring systems designed to bypass traditional radar limitations and FAA blind spots.
- These systems regularly detect objects invisible to public radar and operating with highly irregular flight signatures—some accelerating instantaneously or displaying “erratic orbiting.”
Limitations of Traditional Detection:
- FAA and NORAD systems often miss UAPs because they filter out fast-moving or hovering objects.
- Fowler argues this is by design—most radar tech is calibrated to ignore phenomena that don’t fit conventional aircraft profiles.
Pilot Testimony and Craft Behavior:
- Fighter pilots and special forces members have told Skywatcher firsthand that they’ve witnessed craft performing impossible maneuvers, such as 90-degree turns at Mach speed or hovering silently.
- Some describe the flight mechanics as “reverse gravity”—indicative of inertial dampening or anti-gravitic propulsion.
Connection to Military Tech and Programs:
- Fowler has been contacted by high-level personnel seeking his data. While not an official whistleblower, he has collaborated with those who are.
- He believes there is a “split”—some factions want disclosure while others are suppressing it, often for defense and technological superiority.
Religious and Metaphysical Parallels:
- Skywatcher suggests some UAPs may not be physical at all but instead operate from a higher-dimensional or metaphysical layer.
- He draws connections between biblical accounts (e.g. Ezekiel’s vision) and modern-day UAP behavior.
Weaponization and the Shadow Programs:
- He warns that some unacknowledged military programs are pursuing weaponization of these technologies.
- This includes manipulating gravitational fields, time-dilation effects, and potentially cloaked craft operating in plain sight.
The Role of Civilian Science and Independent Verification:
- Fowler calls for more open-source, decentralized observation networks to verify anomalous activity and reduce reliance on filtered military data.
- He argues that civilian scientists and spiritual seekers together may be the key to uncovering the truth.
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This is Ingo Swann. He worked with the CIA. He claimed he could see Jupiter while sitting millions of miles away in a room. In 1973, he saw rings around Jupiter — a detail later confirmed in 1979 by the Voyager space probe, which discovered the Jovian ring system.
Ingo Swann was an American artist who had special psychic abilities, which means he could do things like extrasensory perception (ESP) and psychokinesis or moving objects with his mind.
Because of his abilities, he took part in experiments in 1970s that showed these powers might be real. He played an important role in the study of remote viewing.
He was involved in remote viewing experiments established by the U.S. Army and the CIA in collaboration with the Stanford Research Institute.
This clandestine initiative — code-named Project Stargate — later became the basis for the movie The Men Who Stare at Goats, starring George Clooney and Jeff Bridges.
In July 1971, Ingo Swann took part in an experiment during a party where people were trying to photograph signs of psychic powers in a dark room.
In Swann's photo, a ball of light appeared above his head. This event, along with other experiences, helped him realize that he had psychic abilities, which he had first noticed when he was a child.
This led him to become involved in the study of psychic phenomena.
One researcher, Gertrude Schmeidler, tested him at the American Society for Psychical Research. Swann was able to change the temperature of graphite samples without touching them. The setup was carefully controlled to avoid outside influence.
For example, the temperature sensor was kept in a thermos 25 feet away. Instructions were given in a strict, pre-planned order, alternating between trying to make things hotter or colder.
Results showed that Swann could change the temperature near the target and also cause the opposite effect in a faraway area. These changes weren’t based on physical factors like distance, but rather on mental or psychological ones.
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This woman researched alien abductions and found that aliens manipulate perception, control consciousness, cause unexplained illnesses and mental decline, and engage in gruesome activities in underground facilities.
Her work showed that alien encounters could cause serious physical, emotional, and spiritual harm, making people question what aliens really want.
Dr. Turner was a brave activist for human rights and an investigator of alien abductions. She had a background in Old English studies and used to teach at a college. She wrote three books about alien abductions: Into the Fringe (1992), Taken (1994), and Masquerade of Angels (1994), which she co-wrote with a psychic named Ted Rice. Through her work, she asked important questions about whether aliens were truly friendly.
She started studying alien abductions in 1988. In her books Into the Fringe and Taken, she shared her own experiences and those of others who had been abducted, showing how frightening these events were.
In Masquerade of Angels, she wrote about Ted Rice’s experiences. At first, Rice thought the aliens were good, but he later realized they were dangerous. One disturbing story he told was about seeing his dead grandfather turn into a reptile-like creature who behaved in a threatening way. This event was followed by the sudden death of Rice’s grandmother.
Sadly, Dr. Turner died from breast cancer in 1996. After her death, more of her work was published, including stories about her own family’s encounters with aliens. She also believed that people who were abducted were targeted on purpose, not randomly chosen. Dr. Turner thought the military was secretly involved, targeting people who reported alien experiences.
So let's dive into Dr Karla Turner's research...
In her 1995 lecture at the MUFON Convention, Dr. Karla Turner introduced herself as an abductee, using that term because she had been taken and controlled by non-human entities.
She explained that this was a form of alien abduction, something that she and her family had experienced, and she had documented these events in her book Into the Fringe, published in 1992.
Her book focuses on the period between 1987 and 1990, when she and her family became consciously aware of their alien encounters, which had been happening since childhood.
In her view, the nature of alien activity is deliberately designed to prevent humans from collecting solid proof.
According to Dr. Turner, this makes it difficult to feel confident about many of the "facts" in the field. She explained that, based on everything she had learned, there were very few things she felt comfortable calling facts, and that list was very short. Instead of presenting case reports, photos, body markings, or drawings of aliens and spacecraft, as she had done in the past, she chose to take a different approach in this lecture.
This Man's model for Consciousness used by the CIA believed that consciousness and physical reality are deeply connected through vibration. His main idea was that everything in the universe—from atoms to humans to the entire cosmos—is vibrating, and these vibrations are what create and shape reality.
Dr Itzhak Bentov was born in Czechoslovakia during World War II. He lost his parents and siblings in a Nazi concentration camp. After escaping to Israel, he joined the army’s scientific division and helped invent their first rocket—despite not having formal science training. Later, he moved to the U.S. and invented a steerable medical catheter. He was considered a brilliant mind.
His idea of consciousness starts with the smallest particles: atoms. He believed everything in the universe is vibrating or resonating. From atoms to molecules to human beings, everything vibrates. Even things like sound waves, light waves, and gravity waves all follow patterns of harmony (called coherence) and disharmony (decoherence). Reality, according to Bentov, is made up of these vibrations.
He believed that for a tiny moment, when vibrations cancel out to zero (a node), our reality "switches" into a different, higher-frequency state. Most of the time, we experience normal reality, but in those tiny moments, we may be connected to a deeper, more refined level of existence.
Itzhak Bentov’s work played a crucial role in shaping the theoretical foundation of the CIA’s Gateway Process. Bentov, known not only for his inventions like a remote-controlled cardiac catheter and diet spaghetti, also wrote extensively about human consciousness.
His biomedical and metaphysical models were central to Lt. Col. Wayne M. McDonnell’s 1983 report for the U.S. Army, which explored methods for transcending spacetime using the mind.
McDonnell’s report pulled ideas from various sources, but Bentov’s theories provided the scientific scaffolding that helped explain how altered states of consciousness—induced through techniques like meditation, biofeedback, hypnosis, and Kundalini yoga—could lead to powerful transformations in perception.
Specifically, Bentov’s ideas helped support the notion that the human body and mind can be tuned like instruments, with vibrational coherence playing a key role in achieving states of deep awareness or even out-of-body experiences. His influence helped lend credibility and structure to the more abstract or esoteric elements of the Gateway Process.
This billionaire is convinced that non-human intelligent life exists among us and that such entities may exist in other dimensions. He claims that G-LOC makes our consciousness leave the body, allowing us to see beyond the room while being outside the body.
Robert Bigelow has long been fascinated by supernatural phenomena and has invested millions in researching the mystery behind consciousness, UAPs, and extraterrestrials.
He is well-known in the space industry. His company makes special inflatable space modules. Some of these modules have been tested on the International Space Station.
He believes that aliens are already here on Earth. In an interview with CBS in 2017, he said he was “absolutely convinced” of their presence.
He explained that there has always been an extraterrestrial (ET) presence among humans. He also said he had spent millions of dollars researching this topic. According to him, people don’t need to travel far to find aliens because they are already here. However, when asked for details about his own experiences, he refused to share them.
In 1996, NIDS started investigating Skinwalker Ranch. This was a cattle ranch owned by the Sherman family, who had reported strange events like UFO sightings, animals being mysteriously harmed, and visits from unknown beings. Bigelow found these stories interesting, so he bought the ranch and set up a team of researchers to study it.
For the first year, nothing unusual happened. However, later reports suggested that something strange did occur, which caught the attention of a U.S. senator named Harry Reid.
Senator Reid had been interested in UFOs for a long time. A journalist told him about NIDS, and since Reid already knew Bigelow, he got involved. Reid even attended a NIDS meeting where experts discussed UFOs and other unexplained events. He became very interested in the topic.
Over the years, Reid continued to follow UFO research, even though his staff thought it might make him look bad. In 2007, Bigelow introduced Reid to James Lacatski, a scientist working for the U.S. government. Lacatski had read a book called Hunt for the Skinwalker, which described strange things happening at the ranch, like UFOs, ghostly lights, and mysterious creatures. He was so fascinated that he shared the book with others in the government.
Lacatski visited Skinwalker Ranch himself. During one visit, he claimed to have seen something floating in the kitchen—an object that looked like the cover of a music album called Tubular Bells. After this experience, he became convinced that the strange events at the ranch needed further investigation.
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This man spent his life searching for the truth behind reincarnation and found compelling evidence suggesting that souls are reborn after death. His research indicates that genetics, environment, and parental nurturing may not solely account for a child's development and behavior. He believed that certain personality traits of deceased individuals might influence children in ways that couldn't be easily explained.
Dr. Ian Stevenson was a Canadian-born American psychiatrist who became interested in studying cases where children seemed to remember past lives. He was very successful in his career and became the head of the psychiatry department at the University of Virginia in 1957. However, his interest in paranormal topics grew stronger over time.
In 1968, a wealthy inventor named Chester Carlson, who created the Xerox copying process, died suddenly. He left a million dollars to the University of Virginia to fund Stevenson’s research into the paranormal. With this money, Stevenson was able to focus completely on studying children who claimed to remember past lives.
Over the next 40 years, Stevenson’s research convinced some skeptics and made his supporters compare him to famous scientists like Charles Darwin and Galileo.
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Dr. Stevenson became well known for carefully studying children who claimed to remember past lives. One case involved a young girl in Sri Lanka who suddenly started talking about a past life after hearing her mother mention a town called Kataragama—a place she had never been.
The girl told her mother that she had drowned in Kataragama when her mentally challenged brother pushed her into a river. She also described details about her past family, including a bald father named "Herath" who sold flowers near a Buddhist temple, a house with a skylight, and dogs in the backyard that were tied up and fed meat. She even mentioned that the house was next to a Hindu temple where people broke coconuts on the ground.
This Man, who worked for NASA, has devised several experiments to prove that our reality is a simulation. He says, 'Consciousness is not a product of the simulation — it is fundamental to reality.'
Thomas Campbell is a physicist, author, and speaker. He’s best known for writing a book series called My Big T.O.E. — where "T.O.E." stands for Theory of Everything. In this series, he tries to explain how everything in the universe works, from physics to consciousness.
His big idea is that reality might be like a computer simulation — like a super advanced video game. He believes the universe started with a "digital Big Bang" and that everything we experience is part of a virtual world. This idea connects to something called digital physics, which suggests that the universe runs on information, like a computer program.
Campbell also worked with other scientists to design experiments that could test whether we’re living in a simulation. In 2018, he even ran a successful Kickstarter campaign that raised over $236,000 to fund those experiments.
Thomas Campbell worked for NASA as part of the Ares I program, which was a project aimed at developing a rocket to replace the Space Shuttle and send astronauts to space, including missions to the Moon and Mars. His role focused on risk assessment and solving technical problems to ensure mission and crew safety.
Specifically, he worked on identifying and addressing vulnerabilities — basically figuring out what could go wrong and finding ways to prevent failures. His job was to improve the chances of success for both the rocket and the astronauts on board.
Before that, he had had a long career in defense technology. He had been working as a systems analyst for U.S. Army technical intelligence for 10 years, then spent 30 more years working on missile defense systems as a contractor for the Department of Defense.
So while he's now known for his work on consciousness and simulation theory, his background is rooted in physics and high-stakes engineering — particularly making sure complex systems (like rockets) don’t fail under extreme conditions.
Thomas Campbell’s theory, "My Big TOE" (TOE stands for Theory of Everything), isn’t just a scientific idea — he presents it as a paradigm shift, meaning it completely changes how we understand reality.
He argues that consciousness, not matter, is the true foundation of existence. In other words, the physical world we experience isn’t what's ultimately real — instead, it’s consciousness that creates reality, and everything else (matter, space, time) is secondary.
According to Campbell, our universe works like a virtual reality, designed to give each of us "individuated units of consciousness" — a structured, rule-based environment to learn, grow, and evolve.
Essentially, he suggests that life is less about physical survival and more about developing our consciousness, almost like players in a complex, immersive game where the goal is to become better, more evolved beings.