Friday, October 21, 2005

This Saturday on Dreamland














artwork ©2005 Dana Augustine -- www.danaaugustine.tk


"Tehran Dogfight" UFO Chase Pilot on Dreamland

On December 19, 1976 one of the best documented and most incredible UFO incidents of all time took place when an Iranian Air Force pilot, Lieutenant Parviz Jahari, was ordered to chase a UFO that was under radar observation north of Tehran.
Now, for the first time ever, listen and General Jahari tells us what it was like in the cockpit of his jet as he engaged in one of the greatest UFO encounters of all time.
This thrilling interview is radio at its best, as Whitley Strieber and General Jahari's friend Dr. Roger Leir get the general to tell what it was like to experience things like the loss of his electronics as he drew near the UFO, and what he saw from his cockpit on that historic night.
Dreamland is officially available from 3PM on Saturdays, but for our newsletter readers, it's usually possible to listen from early Friday afternoon. This will be a huge show, so be sure to listen early!
Find out more about Dreamland here.

For subscribers -
Whitley Strieber Commentary on this Wild Storm Year
Hurricane Wilma went from Category 3 to Category 5 in a matter of hours, and has reached the lowest barometric pressure ever recorded. It is being called the most powerful Atlantic hurricane ever. Rita and Katrina devastated the US Gulf Coast. A freak storm ravaged New England with flooding. All across the world, powerful and bizarre storms have shattered homes and lives. Meanwhile, in other areas, such as the Amazon Basin, catastrophic droughts threaten the existence of whole vast ecosystems.
Think it's all explained by human emissions of greenhouse gasses? That's part of it, but there's a bigger picture or NASA scientists wouldn't be observing a shrinkage of polar caps on Mars that has continued over four years.
Global warming has something to do with human greenhouse gas emissions, but it is also part of a much larger process that involves our whole solar system.
If there is one person in the world equipped to make the big picture clear for us, it's Whitley Strieber. He predicted the Amazon drought--not last year or even five years ago. He predicted it in his 1984 book, Nature's End. And the fires that now haunt California. In Superstorm, he correctly predicted a steady worsening of storms worldwide.
Now, in a riveting 30 minute lecture, he goes back three million years and crosses the whole solar system to explain with great clarity exactly what is happening, what part mankind actually plays in it, and what we need to do to insure a safe future for mankind.
This talk is available for listening and download from the Unknowncountry.com subscriber area.
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