Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Cosmic Disclosure: Cosmic Summit


David Wilcock - Corey Goode - Emery Smith
Cosmic Disclosure: Cosmic Summit

David Wilcock: Welcome to another episode of “Cosmic Disclosure”. I'm your host, David Wilcock. And we have a special treat for you: two high-level insiders who have never before spoken in any public or really private forum in the way that we're going to right now.

We have Corey Goode and Emery Smith.

Emery, welcome to the show.

Emery Smith: Hey, Dave, thanks for having me again. Very exciting day.

David: And Corey, thanks for being here.

Corey Goode: Thank you.

David: So we decided to start out this first episode by trying to find one of the areas where there might be common ground between the things that you've experienced, Emery, and the things that Corey's experienced. And so this gets into the topic of underground bases.

So just to start this off, I'm going to ask you some simple questions, and then we'll open it up from there.

Are you aware of either the military or the government, or whatever you want to call it, having underground facilities?

And if so, how extensive are they? How many of them are there? And what do you know about those facilities?

Emery: I'm aware of, in just the U.S. alone, about 300 of these facilities.


Now, when you say government, I want to, like, talk about that, because it's not always the government that owns these facilities.

They GUARD these facilities – the military does – but they don't always . . . are in control of the facilities, because they are owned by larger corporations and unknown organizations.

Corey: That have different oversight.

Emery: Exactly.

Corey: Right.

Emery: Right.

David: So when you say there's about 300 of these facilities that you're aware of . . .

Emery: Just in North America.

David: . . . what would be an average benchmark of what you are thinking that that means? What are those facilities? Of the 300, what would they be like?

How big are they? How many people do they hold?

Emery: Right, there's many different facilities with many different types of populations in them. And they all have a different agenda.

And there are some that are larger, like the ones in New Mexico, Nevada and Colorado, that actually house entire cities, and you never even have to go to the surface.

They also have full running hospitals and whatnot for this elite group.

As far as the laboratories and all the testing going on there with nuclear and other types of energies – because it's not all just medical, of course . . .

David: Right.

Emery: . . . but other things going down there, as Corey can also relate to of working on different types of devices, such as different types of vehicles, number one, space vehicles; also, the medical stuff I talked to you about in the last episodes, with all the storing of cloned bodies and whatnot.

So there are a lot of these facilities that house many different types of projects.

And then there are some that are only for specific types of projects, because it's so compartmentalized, they'll make a whole underground base just for one project.

David: Wow!

Emery: And they'll keep that with the population usually under about 200 people so they can control them.

Corey: So Emery, I know you probably can't tell us the names of the bases that you went to or where they were located, maybe some, but can you tell us the number and how they were different, as well as what it was like going into the bases?


Emery: Yeah, sure. Basically, there's around 300 of these bases in the United States that I'm aware of.

Some of the ones I've been to are in El Paso, Texas, under UTEP.


Of course, everyone knows about the one I've been in in Los Alamos and Kirtland Air Force Base.

Another one would be in Charlottesville, Virginia. There's another one in Denver. Of course, Dulce [New Mexico] you know about. And there's one in White Sands [New Mexico] – under White Sands National Monument.

Also [there's one] in Creststone [Colorado], underneath the sand dunes, which they're trying to now expand that.

David: What about in Canada? Are you familiar with any up there?

Emery: In British Columbia and also near Whidbey Island, off of Washington there.


Corey: When you approach these bases, or these underground facilities, the entrance to them, are they nondescript? Or are they something that . . .

Emery: Yeah, 95% of them are nondescript but also guarded or usually near a base or on a base for the entry points.

Now, there are a few that are out there that actually are not guarded, but they're in such remote desolate areas that . . . I mean, they're guarded, but they're not . . . it's not . . .

Corey: With technology.

Emery: It's not on a base. Right, with technology and satellites.

Corey: They're monitored.

Emery: And completely monitored, exactly.

So I think most of them, to answer your question, would be: you'd have to enter a really secured lab or a really secured corporation or a really secured military installation to access the underground.

Corey: So could you take us through what would be typical if you were to go through?

Emery: Right, absolutely. Depending on where your entry point is and depending on the type of base it is, some of the most common ones, like the one I was stationed at with Kirtland Air Force Base, was basically a fire tower that you would never even think would be the access point.

David: Mm-mm.

Emery: And a fire tower, meaning it's a concrete base, not made out of metal. So I want you to think of a small 30' x 30' building, concrete, that goes up about six floors – straight up – but it's there as a fire observation point, which, of course, never is utilized for that.

And these areas, too, they don't have, like, parking lots in front of them or anything like that. You usually have to walk through many different posts.

But since this was already on the base, inside another base that's there . . . so you're going through two different types of security.

So first you have to get on the military base, number one. And then once you do that, there's another even more secure base on there with the fences and their own security teams. They're not military.

And these are private corporations that I spoke of that are running these things.

So one of the things I was speaking to Dave about one time was my dorm was so close to there I would actually ride my bicycle to this place after work. And I was allowed to put my bicycle near the area and then walk over. And this is just an area that people that on base worked there could walk to it.

So there's many different places to go in, but for us, since it's more convenient since we live on the base, for many scientists.

David: What would happen if somebody started to notice an unusual number of people going into a fire tower like if you were on the base and it wasn't your job?

Emery: Yeah.

David: What would happen then?

Emery: Well, that whole place is monitored, number one, and you're already on a base. And the base already knows there's something . . . You know, THEY already know there's something there.

They don't know the extent of it, though. The military doesn't always know the extent of how large these underground bases are, which you [Corey] could probably attest to.

Corey: Do they typically bring you through and scan your body? Do all these . . . I mean, what other types of security measures do they take?

Emery: Sure. So once you get there, like I did, there was actually a bike rack there that I'd put my bike up. And I'd walk right over, and there's just two doors.

You walk in, and just like you would walk into a hospital to check in somewhere, they take your driver's license and all that stuff.

So there's two security guards there, and you walk in.

And they either recognize you, or they don't recognize you. And you do have three different types of security things you have to do before you go in.

You have a card, number one, and it's very generic. It's nothing special. It doesn't have any . . .

Corey: Just a strip?

Emery: . . . holograms or anything in it. Right, it's just a strip . . . a magnetic strip, like you see on a credit card. So it's nothing special at all.

Then you have, of course, your palm print identification and your iris eye scan, like the old stuff you see in the movies – very similar to that.

So once you go through that and get through all that, then you take the elevator down.

Once you get to the bottom . . .

Corey: Where they weigh you while you're on the elevator going down.

Emery: That's right. The elevator is not a regular elevator. It looks like a regular elevator, but the elevator is actually scanning you to see if you have any type of, let's say, plutonium on you or anything that could be a threat.

So this elevator's doing a body scan on you as you're going down.

David: Wow!

Emery: Yeah. So you cannot smuggle something in, in your orifices. You could not come in there with a bomb or a grenade or a handgun or anything like that.

David: Is it also like an X-ray, MRI kind of thing, where it would . . .

Emery: Yes.

David: Okay, I thought so.

Emery: It's a little different like that. It's not radioactive causing, where . . . of course, they wouldn't do that to you.

David: Right.

Emery: We do wear these special, of course, X-ray badges the whole time we're in there, because it monitors how much radiation you have.

Corey: You're exposed to.

Emery: Right. And it's not always just from the X-rays. It could be other projects in there that are using stuff that it is emanating at a safe level. But they have to monitor you the whole time.

Corey: Do they keep a running tally of any exposure you had to radiation . . .

Emery: Absolutely.

Corey: . . . accumulation?

Emery: Everyone's monitored for gas and radiation and specific light wavelengths, actually, that could cause damage to the body.

So those are the three things they are monitoring all the time.

David: Okay, so, Corey, since you've also had experience with underground bases, at this point, is there anything funny that jumps out at you – anything that he said that was familiar or unfamiliar?

Corey: Oh, yeah, absolutely familiar. And like he said, there's different types of bases.

Some of the bases are . . . you cannot access them from the ground whatsoever. You have to go through the tram system, the secret tram system underground.

Emery: Yeah.

Corey: And the only entrance and exit is through that tram system.

David: Right.

Corey: And often, they will be very deep, as I've said before. At a certain depth, you're no longer considered in United States territory.

David: Um.

Corey: And so you then have free rein.

Emery: Absolutely, yeah.

David: Have you seen . . .

Emery: And I was getting to that, because once you get down there, you have to take the tram.

And many of them have different types of maglev and lavatube devices to get you there.

Corey: I don't think we've had someone that could give a good description of the tram. I know they have short ones for people that you sit in and you're facing each other.

Emery: Right.

Corey: And then they have the larger ones. Can you give a description?

Emery: Yeah, sure. I spoke about this in the past. And one of the ones is kind of like a, as Dave and I call it, like a gondola.

So when you get down there, there's a chair you sit in, and it goes down a very, very long hallway.

And it just keeps going around and around and around. It's very slow, as fast as . . . a little bit faster than you'd see at the airport when you stand on those . . . the standing conveyor belts.

Corey: Right.

Emery: So just a little bit faster than that. And you're sitting down, or you can stand up. You don't have to sit down.


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