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Art Bell welcomes Richard C. Hoagland for an expansive discussion of his newly published 50-page hyperdimensional physics paper and its implications for climate change, planetary science, and space exploration. Hoagland opens by questioning why Japan launched a Mars probe five months early into Earth parking orbit, speculating the Japanese may distrust NASA''s Cydonia photographs or fear their earthquake-prone launch site could be destroyed before the December transfer window opens.

The conversation shifts to Hoagland''s central thesis that energy output across the solar system is governed by angular momentum and planetary alignments rather than conventional thermodynamics. He presents evidence that Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune all radiate more energy than they receive from the sun, and that their luminosities plot on a straight line dependent solely on total spin energy. He predicts these luminosities will change over short timescales, a testable claim no one at NASA has yet investigated.

Hoagland connects record-breaking heat waves, rapid El Nino-to-La Nina shifts, and Antarctic ice core data showing near-instantaneous climate reversals to his model. He argues that ancient pyramids may have functioned as hyperdimensional transducers on a global grid. The show also highlights Arizona politician Frances Barwood''s campaign and her courage in publicly demanding answers about the Phoenix Lights.