Before entering into Area 51, Let's check what really happens at Area 51:













We are told it’s called Area 51 because it was named that in some documents pertaining to the Vietnam War.

The Central Intelligence Agency gives it a far less mysterious name and calls it Homey Airport and Groom Lake.

This is a restricted area in Nevada, about 83 miles (134 km) northwest of Las Vegas. In 1955, the site was first used for flight testing, but what happens there now is largely unknown.

The down to earth theory is that the U.S. conducts secret military exercises there, which includes the testing of weapons that are in development.

The reason it remains so secret, of course, is because the U.S. doesn’t want any of these experiments falling into the hands of its real or possible enemies.

Before we get into any of the more outlandish theories about Area 51, we’ll tell you what we do know.

First of all, it’s a restricted area, but according to most sources we can find, it is not as heavily guarded as you might expect.

You can follow a dusty desert road close to the area, but at some point, you’ll find “No Entry” signs that warn trespassers they could take the brunt of deadly force if they go any farther.

It is patrolled but not as aggressively as you’d think, and it’s more likely you’ll be told to go back or receive a fine rather than be shot at if you wander into the site.

You can’t fly over it, and if you attempt to fly a drone over there, you will no doubt get in trouble.

According to some sources, the area is surrounded by cameras and sensors, with one website stating, “the base knows every Nevada desert tortoise and jackrabbit that hops the fence.”

You can get up to the gates, however, and you’ll have to follow the aptly named “Extraterrestrial Superhighway” to get there.

We found there is even an ‘adult entertainment club’ called the “Alien Cathouse” just west of Area 51.

What we are trying to say is that it’s not as off the grid as you might think.

Ok, so we now know what kind of place we’re looking at.

But what happened there in the beginning?

It was a child of the Cold War with the Soviet Union; the U.S. wanted to test its military equipment in a far-off place.

The military wanted personnel and engineers to go and work there, and for that reason, so we are told, they gave it the nice-sounding name of “Paradise Ranch”.

The first testing would be of a high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft known as the U-2 program.

Soon the locals would spot weird things in the air, or pilots would see strange high-flying aircraft, and this is where the speculation started regarding aliens and such.

Because the government could say nothing about this, the UFO theories seemed almost credulous.

Since then, all manner of covert operations has taken place at Area 51, which you can find by looking at declassified documents.

These include building and testing the “Bird of Prey” black project stealth aircraft in the 90s. There are too many projects to mention, but no doubt aircraft are still being secretly built and tested there today.

The latest developments are all secret, but you can check those declassified documents to see what went down there in the past.

According to one expert, he believes present projects involve “more exotic forms of radio communication, directed energy weapons, and lasers.”

So, what is all the fuss about?

Well, some people believe it’s much more than a place where aircraft is developed, and advanced weapons tested, but a site where the USA’s biggest secrets are kept – such as where the moon landings were filmed and faked.

It’s not the moon landings, however, that has attracted the most attention.

It’s aliens.

If you’ve seen our show on Roswell and those people that say they saw aliens at the Roswell site, one might wonder what happened to our little green friends.

Well, perhaps they were taken to Area 51 and still remain there now.

Does that sound crazy to you?

It might sound crazy if you haven’t heard of the name, Bob Lazar.

Lazar is a 59-year old American engineer that told the world he had worked on reverse engineering several flying saucers.

He made this public at first under a pseudonym when his face was blacked out in an interview on American TV in 1989.

He also claimed he had been given briefing documents explaining that he’d be dealing with aliens from the southern constellation of Reticulum and that these aliens had been on Earth for around 10,000 years.

To power their aircraft, they used the unknown element, "Element 115".

Lazar’s critics say he falsified his academic records, but Lazar says they were wiped by the government.

The only evidence is his testimony, but it must be said he is now a businessman and has no history – that we can find – of mental illness.

In a recent interview, he said, “Look, I know what happened is true. There is no doubt. Period.”

Of all the conspiracy theories, this has the most credibility, only because this supposed whistleblower seems to have no reason to lie and does have a background that could put him inside Area 51.

Whatever the case, his words certainly kicked-off years of speculation as to what goes on in there.

From that point on, many people – without entering solid proof – have said the site is riddled with underground tunnels leading to warehouses full of alien technology and even captured aliens.

But not all the theories involve big-headed green men on a protracted vacation to Planet Earth.

Others believe a group called the “Majestic 12”, who we discussed in our Illuminati show, actually disseminate alien stories about the base because it’s really being used to hatch their plan of ruling over the world.

Aliens are a cover, a diversion story.

How will they rule the world?

Well, they might start by de-populating the planet. One of the conspiracy theories out there about Area 51 is that it is the place where weather control is developed and practiced. Before you get carried away, we should mention that many projects of the USA have been involved with weather control, including Project Cirrus and Project Storm Fury, and while these were benign, who’s to say similar weather control projects couldn’t be used more nefariously?

That’s what the doomsday believers tell us, anyway.

What about the faked moon landings?

Why was that flag waving in the wind when there is no wind on the moon?

NASA says it’s because the flag was being twisted by Buzz Aldrin. Was filmmaker Stanley Kubrick in on the deal?

Much cheaper to hire him than actually go to the thing.

There are countless theories out there stating that the landing was a hoax, but these have so far all been debunked.

We don’t have time to go through them all, but you can easily find them on the web. One of the non-conspiracy related issues involving Area 51 is that around the site there is a lot of radioactive waste and people have actually died from radiation poisoning. Civilians who worked there have complained of “rashes, racking coughs or dreadful skin conditions.”

This has led to lawsuits being filed. In 2013 the LA Times called this, “The real cover-up.”

So, yes, the American government is certainly working on some very experimental things in Area 51, and what goes on in there is kept secret for a reason.

But it’s anyone’s guess as to what is happening as you are watching this show, but there can be no doubt it is related to destructive forces.



You may have your own theories or can provide more information as to the conspiracy theories, but we certainly cannot find any compelling evidence that supports some of the more outlandish stories.

Imagining entering into Area 51





September 20th, 2019- the day that the people of Earth discover that the US government has been hiding the presence of extraterrestrials from the public.





Our millennia of intergalactic solitude has finally come to an end, and the greatest question ever asked by science has at last been answered: are we alone?





For decades the people of earth have been visited by aliens from another planet, who have worked in secret cooperation with the United States government.





These aliens have crossed the vast distances of intergalactic space with mind-bending technologies in order to mutilate cows, show up as blurry blobs in videos, and conduct experiments on

abductees involving probes in very uncomfortable places.





The truth is no longer 'out there', it's finally here, in the open. Or, perhaps September 20th, 2019 will merely be the day that many hundreds of misled people

get arrested for trespassing by the US government, earning hefty fines, long sentences in federal prison, and ending up with experiments involving probes in very uncomfortable places of a totally

different sort.





Today we're going to look at the phenomenon that has swept the internet, the massive plan to raid Area 51 and plunder it of its alien secrets and turn to a friend of the show

and former security expert for the US military as he tells us why storming area 51 is a terrible idea.





On June 27th a facebook event hosted by three different Facebook accounts appeared publicly, entitled simply Storm Area 51, They Can't Stop All of Us.





The event would later be claimed by a Matty Roberts as having been started in jest, but the joke very quickly caught on and went global.





As of this writing, 1.7 million people have signed on to the event, and another 1.3 million are interested.





The official date is set for September 20th, 2019, for the hours of between 3 am and 6 am.

While Roberts has come forward and explained that it was a joke, he did so only after the event skyrocketed in popularity and out of fear that should something really happen,

that the US government would be looking for him for being the ringleader. He wanted to publicly declare that the event was a joke and he was in no way serious about

storming Area 51.





Whether he was serious or not is likely not to matter come September 20th, with the event gaining popularity around the world.





While most people signed on to the event as a satirical joke, it's clear from the facebook page for the event that there are plenty of people who see the opportunity to rush the

secretive restricted area en masse as a way to at last plunder its secrets.





The rallying crow of “they can't stop us all” has made many people take the event seriously, and it's now feared that on September 20th a large group of people will make a serious

attempt to enter the secretive base.





Recently the US Air Force sent out a message addressing the online joke, warning that “any attempts to illegally access the area is highly discouraged.”





So could enough people breach the secret base's defenses, what would happen if they did, and why all the hoopla over Area 51 anyways?





Area 51 is situated in a remote corner of the Nevada Test and Training Range at Groom Lake, which is a large expanse of desert where US pilots hone their abilities dropping live

and dummy ordnance on ground targets.





It was so remote in fact that it quickly became the premier destination for developing new and advanced planes for the CIA and the US Air Force.





It was for instance where the infamous U2 spyplane was originally developed, a technological marvel of its time which flew so high that it was for years out of reach of Soviet fighters

and missiles.





The facility was also the home of the infamous Skunk Works, a group of engineers who developed some of the world's most advanced airplanes, and from which the likes of the SR-71 and

the F-117 came from.





Any other information, to include if the legendary Skunk Works still operates from the site, is difficult to verify, as the entire facility remains a highly classified secret and the

US government barely even acknowledges its presence.





Satellite imagery of the site though shows that indeed several buildings and flight lines have been constructed, and curiously enough, a flight line long enough to land even the

the biggest aircraft developed anywhere in the world is clearly visible.





Others claim that you can see in some satellite images how the flight lines lead to underground bunkers, though the veracity of those claims is dubious at best.





If alien life was visiting planet earth, and the United States government had in fact gotten its hands on some of that alien tech or was cooperating with aliens, it seems that Area

51 would be the ideal place for such activity.





The site is notoriously remote and difficult to get to, miles away from any road, and difficult to spy on due to the mountains that border it.





But could you penetrate it, and if you did, entering into area 51 what would happen?

Our expert warns us immediately that any attempt to penetrate a restricted military facility comes with serious consequences- this isn't Stranger Things, this is real life, and trying

to get into a restricted area can land you with serious jail time, huge fines, or worse.





Trespassing on a restricted military facility can carry a penalty of up to ten years in federal prison and is often accompanied by a fine of tens of thousands of dollars- which

you will be obligated to pay before or after your prison sentence.





Naturally, though the condition of your trespass is often taken into consideration, with our expert telling us that if it's clear you were inadvertently trespassing then you would likely

simply be apprehended, searched, debriefed, and then driven back to a point outside of the facility and be freed to go.





If however, your trespass was purposeful, you might get the book thrown at you- especially if it seemed like your trespass was malicious in nature, as in you were actively trying

to steal government materials or secrets.





Different restricted areas have different levels of secrecy, however, and some places- termed black world facilities- are so secretive that your trespass and ensuring trial are

all kept under the strictest measures of secrecy, with no details of your trial becoming public knowledge.





No, you are not tried by some secretive shadow court and condemned to the dark side of the moon, but rather your trial and everyone involved, including your lawyer and any witnesses, are

all forced to sign extremely harsh confidentiality agreements, with very, very strict penalties for breaking them.





That is of course if you are arrested because our expert tells us that there is one more option for dealing with trespassers, and that's to simply shoot them.





No, this isn't Soviet Russia where you can get shot just for hopping a fence to a military base, but our expert warns us that there are concentric rings of security around restricted

facilities, and if you penetrate deep enough through those rings of security you eventually hit one ring where deadly force is authorized, no questions asked.





Of course, these areas are always very clearly marked by signs which state as much, so there's no chance you would wander into an area where you could get shot just for being there with

no authorization, you would have to make the choice to continue pushing forward despite the risks.





The reason why these harsh measures exist is simple, some secrets are so vital to national security, that the government cannot risk they been discovered by foreign governments.

Take for instance the Manhattan Project- if knowledge of how to build a working nuclear weapon was discovered by the Germans, the entire course of the war may have taken a

radically different route.





I

f you manage to penetrate the outer layers of security and get to these ' shoots first ask questions later' areas, then it means that you are there on a mission, and you are

likely seeking to cause great harm to the United States.





So what would happen if you joined 1.7 million people in rushing Area 51?





Would you get to see “dem aliens”?





First, our expert tells us that you would run into a sign warning you that you are entering into a restricted area, and typically warning you of the penalties for doing so.





The first line of defense:





Most secretive government facilities aren't behind huge fences, as that would be far too obvious a give-away, but rather they rely on extreme remoteness and large tracts of

empty land to discourage anyone from getting too close.





Throughout this seemingly empty landscape are security patrols dispersed throughout the first two outer rings of security, and even if you don't see them odds are that they

see you.





Armed with high powered visual aids, night vision, and thermal imagers, this security personnel are vectored in on trespassers by sensors hidden under the ground.





Pressure sensors buried under avenues of approach and seismic sensors throughout the entire outer perimeter give alarm operators perfect situational awareness of the miles of the empty

landscape surrounding the secret facility, and typically a host of hidden high-power cameras allow them to spy on any portion of their perimeter.





If trespassers are detected, they are typically allowed to wander through the first, outer perimeter of security without being intercepted.





That is because these areas are so large and remote that people wander in and out by accident all the time, and the security personnel at the facility prefer that you never even find

out you had inadvertently strolled into somewhere you weren't supposed to.





The entire time you are in the first ring of security though you will be closely monitored from afar, sometimes even by air through drones, and likely not have a clue what you're being

spied on.





The second line of defense:





If however, you continue forward you will reach the second outer ring of security. Much smaller than the first outer ring, this second ring is continuously patrolled by security

personnel on foot or in vehicles, and penetrating it will result in a security patrol being immediately dispatched to apprehend you.





Our expert tells us that you likely won't get too far through this second ring of security, as you will have been carefully observed the entire time you approached it through the

first ring.





A patrol will move to your position and apprehend you, search you and your vehicles, and typically debrief you or just move you straight back to the outer most perimeter and warn you to

not return.





The third line of defense:





you somehow evade detection or capture though, you'll reach the inner ring of security- or at least the inner ring of the outer security zone because there remains one more inner

ring that's within the facility buildings itself.





Here the movement of personnel is highly restricted, even amongst the personnel who work at the facility, and even though you may have the clearance to work at one part of the facility,

you may not be cleared for any other part of the same facility.





In this inner ring, even the base staff have to be on high alert against straying where they don't belong.





For you though, a complete outsider who doesn't belong at all, straying into this area could be deadly.





It's here that signs warning of the use of deadly force are placed, and while it can be up to the discretion of the security commander or even the individual patrol that discovers

you, you really don't want to press your luck.





Remember, only really bad guys would be interested in getting this close to a secret facility, so any responding security personnel is going to assume that you're out to cause some serious

harm to the US.





We cannot stress enough how dangerous it would be to penetrate this area. These are all, of course, the outer layers of security, and inside of each facility, our

expert tells us that even more stringent security measures exist, with even greater repercussions for violating them.





He would not elaborate on inner security measures but did tell us that many times the guards restricting access to a facility might themselves not have a high enough clearance to be inside

the facility itself!





That' is how seriously classified some facilities are, and an entirely different team of guards with an even higher security clearance may be assigned to work the actual insides of

the facility.





Though our expert would not comment much on the inner workings of restricted facilities, he did leave us with this story: I was assigned to a facility with two outer doors, each with

a more stringent set of security measures to verify your identity before you could pass.





The outer door opened to the outside world, and the second door, where I was located, was inside a small room connected to that first outer door.





There was a scanner machine that worked automatically and my job was twofold: ensure nobody trying to access the facility messed with the machine as it verified their identity and credentials,

and if the machine ever set off an alarm, I was to immediately terminate the individual attempting entry.





Once the machine granted entry, I was not allowed to look inside the open door and had to stand with my back to whatever that door opened up into.





After speaking with our expert it's clear that storming Area 51 would be a terrible idea.





While group posts claim that “they can't stop all of us”, our expert warns that yes, they very much have the means and firepower to stop even a major incursion event, and

that if whatever is inside Area 51 is of vital national security importance, then they will do just that.





He warns us that the most sensitive of these facilities were designed to stop a full-scale military assault.





Also, though he would not go into specifics, our expert told us that in all likelihood even if you managed to defeat the outer security, you would simply never be able to access the

actual facilities themselves as part of their security measures include the ability to completely lock out the outside world.





After reading this article do you think you would try storming Area 51 or not?





Think the US is really hiding aliens?