The Roswell Alien Interview | Your Soul Has Been Here Thousands of Times
4/10/202639 min
In 2007, a writer named Lawrence Spencer opened an envelope he didn't ask for.
Inside were military documents from Roswell Army Air Field, dated 1947. Duty rosters, memos, Top Secret stamps. And buried near the bottom, transcripts of interviews with a subject the US Army couldn't communicate with using any conventional method.
No translator worked. No known language matched. The only person who could reach the subject was a nurse named Matilda MacElroy — and she did it without saying a word.
The woman who sent Spencer th...
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsAJ Gentile· Host0:00
[mysterious music] In 2007, Lawrence Spencer found a thick envelope in his mailbox. It was full of military documents from the 1940s. Some were routine duty rosters and schedule memos. Some were stamped "Top Secret," but all were from Roswell Army Air Field. Spencer also found transcripts of strange interviews. At first, they couldn't communicate with the subject. The military brought in translators, scientists, even cryptographers, but nothing worked. Finally, they learned the only way to communicate was telepathically. And there are pages of predictions, warnings, strange technology, and a secret war. Nothing made sense. Then Spencer found a page that explained everything. It said, "Roswell AAF 509th Bomb Group. Alien interview, July 8th, 1947." [upbeat music] [mysterious music] Matilda McElroy was a nurse in the US Army and she had a secret, a secret that could get her killed, so she kept her mouth shut. Then she got cancer. With only a few weeks to live, Matilda packed up a stack of military documents and mailed them to Lawrence Spencer. She read his book about unexplained phenomena, The Oz Factors. She decided he was the only person who might take her seriously. Her letter was handwritten and desperate.
Matilda McElroy· Soundbite1:26
I have kept this secret for 60