On this episode of Neon Galactic, Dr. Garry Nolan from Stanford University about the Sol Foundation, his work with Skywatcher, the nature of consciousness and the complexities of scientific work in a capitalist society.
Nolan is the Rachford and Carlota A. Harris Professor in the Department of Pathology at Stanford University School of Medicine. He has published over 350 research articles and is the holder of 50 US patents, and has been honored as one of the top 25 inventors at Stanford University. He has in recent years been one of the foremost scientists willing to engage in the research and study of unidentified anomalous phenomena.
We discuss the Sol Foundation, its goals for the future, and how it’s proceeding on three different tracks to help encourage the study of UAPs. We also discuss such work is viewed by the larger scientific mainstream, and how he’s hoping to bring the subject into larger academic and scientific arenas.
Friends, by now you are probably aware of the upcoming documentary, “Age of Disclosure”. This secret project has taken over two and a half exhaustive years to complete and I am proud to have played a major role in its development. I believe it has the potential to change the UAP conversation irrevocably.
The Director is Dan Farah, the Producer of Spielberg’s “Ready Player One”. I am also proud to be joined by many senior officials, many of whom risked everything to tell you the truth, to include their political careers, their professional reputations, and even their safety.
This documentary was intended to be the definitive center piece to help drive disclosure in a way like never before. It has been a rollercoaster for all involved.
Please join Dan and many others for the premier at SXSW Film Festival tomorrow. I have a previous engagement that I cannot reschedule but know that I will be with every one of you, in spirit. I encourage you to go see it and tell your friends. @Dan_Farah @sxsw #AgeOfDisclosure
Ron Garan, a former NASA astronaut, has spent 178 days in space and accumulated more than 114 million kilometers traveling in 2,842 orbits around Earth. His journey, however, hasn’t been just about impressive numbers. During one of those trips, he experienced something that few humans have ever experienced: the so-called Overview Effect, a phenomenon that transforms the way we see our planet. The Overview Effect — or “Overview Effect” — is a reality shock common among astronauts. By observing the Earth from space, they realize, viscerally, that the planet is a unique, fragile and interconnected system. For Garan, the experience was so remarkable that he describes it as a “great awakening”. In an interview with the site Big Think, he revealed: “Certain things become undeniably clear when you’re up there.” From his window on the International Space Station, Garan witnessed breathtaking natural phenomena: lightning storms that resembled paparazzi flashes, the northern lights dancing like glowing curtains, and the Earth’s atmosphere so thin you could “almost touch with your hands.” But it was the fineness of that layer that had him on his toes. “I realized that everything that sustains life on Earth depends on a fragile layer, almost like paper,” he explained. The atmosphere, with its few kilometers thick, is what protects all life forms from hostile conditions of space. For Garan, this view has highlighted a paradox: while the biosphere is vibrant and full of life, human systems treat the planet as a “subsidy to the global economy.” In other words, we prioritize economic growth at the expense of the natural systems that sustain us. “We’re living a lie,” he stated. The astronaut also pointed out how problems like global warming, deforestation, and loss of biodiversity are treated as isolated issues when, in fact, they are symptoms of a larger problem: human disconnection with the planet. “From space, it becomes clear that we do not see each other as part of a whole. “As long as we do not change this mentality, we will continue to be in crisis,” he said. The solution, according to Garan, is a radical change of priorities. Instead of thinking about “economy, society, planet”, we should reverse the order: “planet, society, economy”. This simple exchange reflects the need to place environmental health as the basis for all other decisions. “This is the only way we will really evolve,” he argued. Another crucial point is independence . Garan compared the Overview Effect to “a lightening lamp” — an epiphany about how every human action, however small it may seem, affects the global balance. “We will not have peace on Earth until we recognize that everything is interconnected,” he affirmed. Since returning to Earth, Garan has dedicated himself to projects that promote sustainability and global cooperation. His message is clear: We urgently need to rethink our place in the world. Have you ever stopped to imagine what it would be like to see the Earth from this perspective? While that doesn’t happen, Garan’s vision reminds us that every choice — from energy consumption to resources usage — is a step toward preserving (or destroying) this delicate “shell” we call home. “