reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In the conversation, the interviewee describes finding intriguing material in his girlfriend’s aunt’s flat during a search. Among items, he recalls an Excel spreadsheet titled non terrestrial officers. He explains that his search terms included UFOs, ET, terrestrial, and anything spacecraft, noting the document might not use those words in the title. The spreadsheet reportedly listed ship names, materials (with military spellings rather than civilian terminology), and transfers between ships and fleets. It also contained references to exotic chemicals, including molybdenum and other hard-to-pronounce substances.
The interviewee notes that, at the time, he checked the ship names thinking they would be US Navy vessels, but found nothing that matched seagoing ships. He does not remember any individual names, only a long list with initials or surnames, and the ship names did not resemble typical navy hulls like USS Lincoln. He recalls using AltaVista rather than Google and finding no seagoing vessel matches.
Regarding the chemicals, he recalls molybdenum, barium, and other exotic items, and reflects on what these imply. The discussion then shifts to related topics the researchers had explored later, such as biofilm brown stuff, dielectrics, and nano deposition of thin layers, with mention of materials engineered in layers thinner than a human hair (microns or sub-micron thickness). A participant describes a sample of multilayered bismuth and magnesium, with bismuth layers thinner than a human hair, allegedly recovered from the crash retrieval of an advanced aerospace vehicle, noting there was no evidence that anyone had manufactured such a sample.
The interviewee estimates the spreadsheet’s size on an old 800x600 monitor, suggesting about 24 lines and roughly 30 to 40 names overall. He admits he did download the Excel file but, when he was arrested, all data were taken to the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI), and his hard drives remain with ONI as part of an ongoing investigation, with attempts to retrieve them blocked.
The discussion broadens to historical context: the Office of Naval Intelligence is described as the oldest U.S. intelligence agency (authentically predating the CIA and OSS), with a brief mention of Thomas Townsend Brown’s work for the Navy and Harold Malmgren’s claims. Malmgren purportedly said ONI “knows the most about this issue,” and that entering that door can lead to a closed system with no exit. Another participant notes that Naval Intelligence may approach researchers with special access if they show substantial knowledge, but such access constitutes a closed system.
Overall, the dialogue centers on a hidden spreadsheet linking non terrestrial officers, unusual materials, and clandestine naval intelligence dynamics, with implications of restricted access and ongoing investigations.