Full Jake Barber interview
This is vastly better. He presents himself much better. He is obviously intelligent and articulate.
The deal is that he got through the tough parts of the Air Force Combat Control School—the parts where people quit—and somewhere in the two year or so pipeline he was recruited by a three letter agency to basically be a deniable intelligence asset masquerading as an airplane mechanic. He was obviously tough, since he got through the selection process (I think they call it Indoc), and must have stood out as unusually intelligent, at least in practical, tactical ways. He did in fact apparently do a fair amount of work in his deniable asset capacity, and was nominated for an award for heroism for something he did in Bosnia, but the award was denied since it would have blown his cover.
He spent a whole lot of time doing nothing but living his cover story, both in the military and outside of it. He was in fact trained as, and worked as, a mechanic. And his work at the Range, which I suspect is in California without really having any way to know, was mainly recovering our own experimental stuff that crashed for one reason or another.
This presentation is much better for him to showcase who he is. Coulhart seems to be a bit thick at times, in my view, but he certainly deserves kudos for opening this forum up to Barber and others. There are two more interviews, one with a definite CCT, Fred Baker, and another with a guy named Don Paul Bales, who we are told spent 25 years in the military and law enforcement. The only detail is that he was apparently a member of the 82nd Airborne at Fort Bragg. Both can be searched on YouTube for those with an interest. I listened to both and found them interesting.
I do feel there is something real here, and that Barber and Baker and Bales—odd that their names all start with B—are telling all of the truth right now that they can.
And I will add that it appears that Barber probably went public with his name and face for protection. Once you are out, the threat of you coming out has vanished. This is a form of protection. The original plan, according to Steven Greer, was to release all the evidence and videos via blockchain and keep the names secret. But instead we got the names but not much of the evidence, which apparently is available but subject to Pentagon withholding.
I would assume no private agreement with a private contractor would hold up legally, if the activity in question was illegal, which is Greer’s argument. For that matter, neither would an NDA signed with the DoD, although battling that out legally might take years and involve jail time in the meanwhile.
But it would seem that if Trump can declassify all this stuff, that in turn would allow them to publicly say all they know, or at least as much as it makes sense for them to share, given that some of these technologies remain important for national defense.
Certainly this decision should involve suits and brains around a table. But the bias should be in favor of opening cans of worms and making public conversations that should have been held many decades ago; and which would have been, had the assholes not gotten control of the thing.
Our world may be on the verge of a sea change. I think it is.
