(Cara StLouis Farrelly) In fact, most people (check)
And the way I've come to be
sitting with you, Miles,
goes back to --
in fact, goes back my whole life --
but specifically to July 2010, when I was
living in the State of Maine in the US,
Obviously, I am an American.
And with my family --
(Miles Johnston ) You're not Canadian?
(Cara) I'm not Canadian, no: I am
from the American Southwest, actually,
which is really sort of germinal to
my own personal history, but
particularly there, I was living in
seacoast Maine, in a little village
and my mother had come
to be near the grandchildren,
because they were all growing up.
And she'd been there for about a year
and July 11 was a beautiful, sunny
Sunday morning in Maine
and she got up and she was walking
to church, which was about
a block and a half from her flat,
from where she lived
and she had just about reached
the other side of the main street,
which is, we call it the High Street,
it's a very small town,
when she was actually run over by a van,
a minivan
and thrown god knows how far, twenty or
(no sound)
point my mother was 74 years old,
she was definitely, you know,
in the latter moments of her life,
her lifespan and anyway, just about
every bone in her body was broken
and she was conscious, believe it or not,
taken to the hospital.
I joined her there and she died
in my arms a few hours later.
So, one would have thought that
that alone is just a tragedy
and a horrific thing to have happen
in your life, and of course it is.
And, you know, one would have been --
the normal, the natural thing
would have been to --
to just receive that as a crazy accident
and that something meaningless
ended someone's life, although
I don't believe anything is an accident
or meaningless, or without purpose, but --
the reality is, as the months went by,
I couldn't get any information
about my mother's death,
and that made no sense at all,
because it was a small town,
she was a little old lady
who was crossing the street
and she was run over and killed.
And I was her sole survivor.
I literally had to have an attorney write
a letter to the local police authority
invoking the Freedom Of Information Act
to get even the smallest police report.
It made no sense whatsoever.
So this really started me thinking
something that had been in my guts
to begin with, with this death.
And that was that, although my mother
had started her life as a music teacher,
she had, half way through, begun to work
for the US government
and specifically the military, first the
Office of Information here in Nevada
and then the US Navy.
She worked for weapons entities
in Dog Run (check) Virginia
and then she was transferred to London,
she got a position at the Office of
Naval Research here in London,
which is a very serious organization
in terms of the Navy.
People think the NSA is the top dog in (check)
but it's not, it's the Navy.
The Navy is very much --
(Miles) the senior service
(Cara) Senior, the senior spook service.
(Miles) It's been around a lot longer.
(Cara) You better believe it.
That's where it all starts
and that's where it all goes down,
I mean, it trickles down from the Navy.
She was the editor of something called
the Fact Sheet for three years, 1989-1991.
She had a .... (check)
very high social security plan
I mean she saw all (blank)
in this office were.
Eastern block scientists,
some Western scientists
Lots of operation paperclip scientists,
OK, working on weapons,
working on atmospheric weapons,
electro-magnetics, psychology,
scalar weapons, you better believe it,
all of that stuff.
Now, obviously my mother was not
a scientist but she was also not --
she was also a very intelligent woman;
and so, even though she might not have
understood everything
that went across her desk, she certainly
understood enough of it
that the only thing she ever told me
about what she saw was that
a lot of it scared the hell out of her:
that's all she could ever tell me.
OK, so this was 89, 90 and 91.
This is what I'm thinking and then,
when she retired,
she went back to Dog Run (check)
after they eliminated that position
in London
and worked for a Surface Weapons there (check),
for the Navy.
And then she retired, at the age of 60,
moved to Hawaii,
and started working
with independent contractors.
And in Hawaii, that's a huge, huge, huge
business, it is their primary business.
Tourism is nothing compared to the
government contracts business in Hawaii.
Anyway, she was technical editor for
several companies who were trying
to get business with DARPA, another very,
very very black entity in the United States.
Their funding is endless, bottomless.
So, I have to assume
and always had to assume
that my mother saw lots and lots
and lots of things.
So here was this little old lady who
had been killed for seemingly no reason.
Several other people had stopped
and she was almost across the street
and then boom, she was dead.
So, you know this -- because I was trying
to get over the actual event,
because it really man-handled
the entire town, this event,
a lot of people saw it, I just kind of
lived with it for a while, and then
you know what happened, Miles?
December 31st, 2010, John Wheeler
was killed in DC -- do you remember that?
(Miles) remind me
(Cara) Well, he was the fellow
who supposedly was responsible
for getting the Vietnam War Memorial
erected, but he was working as an
independent contractor for the government,
he was a liaison between the Pentagon
and some really serious (blank).
He was also an adviser, probably
a security adviser, I'm trying to remember
to three presidents, and they found
the guy in a dumpster --
do you remember this?
(Miles) no but--
(Cara) Well, they did, they found
him in a dumpster
(Miles) For the sake of argument (check)
just tell it ....
(Cara) Yes. December 31st they found
this guy in a dumpster.
He was a West Point graduate, I mean,
his credentials were impeccable,
most surely, he was working for Alphabet
operations, so he is not --
I mean, one would expect a man like him
to be working for all kinds of people
like that, but it was so random
and so jarring that this had happened
that it really reminded me of my mom.
And it's not that I thought
they knew each other,
that's not what I mean at all, it's just
that it took me back to this idea
that civilians working for the military
could just potentially be expendable, yes?
OK, so I'm thinking about that
on December 31st 2010
and then the next day, January 1st 2011,
is the day all the birds started falling
from the sky in Arkansas.
And the fish start-- well, God knows
how long it was actually happening
but this is when it came to our attention,
tens of thousands of birds
fell out of the sky the next day,
the next day in Arkansas, and all
the fish started washing up on the shores.
Yes?
(Miles) Which is happening now.
(Cara) which has been happening daily,
I mean, I've seen lists
of what's still going on, it's incredible
what's going on. (8:09)