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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An Incredible Story, October 1, 2006
David Adair's story is hard to believe. However, before one musters up too sceptical a criticism, they should consider a few facts: It is equally hard to believe that this man, an internationally recognized expert in space technology spinoff applications for industry and commercial use, the president of a company that holds clients such as the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Clemson University, Edison Electric, Reynolds Aluminum, and the United States Army, Air Force and Navy, who, at age 17, won "The Most Outstanding in the Field of Engineering Sciences" award from the US Air Force, and, at 19, was funded by the National Science Foundation, is out to make a name for himself by publishing an outlandish fictional account.
What lends credence to the story is the man himself, who testified to this story in front of a closed congressional committee. Adair, along with Steven Greer and others is currently working to force open congressional hearings that will grant covert operatives total immunity from their national security oaths in regard to UFO events.
I have not heard a debunker yet who has come up with hard facts to dispute David Adair's story.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Mystery Science Theater Stuff, July 1, 2008
David Adair is one of those guys who who reinvented themselves and became famous based on the pathetic willingness of Americans to believe anything. "Skimpy resume" is redundant, especialy for such a genius. And he's not being nice. He won't tell the legions of scientists around the world working on controlled fusion how he singlehandedly built a "fusion engine" (lol). Can we have a hint? Or maybe he can build his engine again?
Come on, folks. When you hear fusion engines, "live" aliens, spaceships underground & exposure of massive conspiracies (on Youtube of all places) then it's time to run. But it is lots of fun and is probably financially rewarding. Watch the video (preferably with an engineer) and howl. Needless to say, his pay-for-entry talks focus solely on UFO's, strange vague engines and conspiracies. The science is missing but the fiction is present.
Does anyone seriously believe that a spaceship able to cross interstellar space would "crash" on Earth? It's absurd on its face. Again, no proof (motor), pictures (alien) or history (records). Just one good story.
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1 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
The guy is a fraud, March 16, 2007
Let me mention that I personaly observed a UFO close-up - so no doubts there in general and I am usually quite generous with bending science, but this is DVD just too much: this guy knows nothing about nuclear physics and the math involved. He not only built an impossible rocket engine, he also built an unlikely targeting system. Only a black hole bends light - right (any gravity source does - but who cares)and he found a mistake in Hawkins math meeting the man in England by just having a glimps at the blackboard. I bet the timing doesnt check out (but I havn't taken the trouble to confirme that) and will anybody pls ask Mr Hawkins if he ever even heard the name Adair? That childhood genius then proceeded to live a life of a lowly technical saleman until he comes out of the closet decades later. His only protection is that the average showbizz TV person knows even less (or is afraid to ask). This is stupid even for the usual disinfo. I want my money back !!!!!
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