Everybody loves good science fiction. Therefore Laura Eisenhower's interview with Albert Webre will be especially interesting to people who love incredibly far out stories. It comes on the 50th anniversary of Dwight Eisenhower's famous speech on the dangers of the military-industrial complex.
As far as astonishing goes, you can't get more far out than to believe that there is a survival settlement on Mars, said to be co-inhabited by aliens and humans. It has been there forever, certainly before humans realized that there was such a thing as fire. Today that Martian settlement is something that will be used as a life preserver when the violence that is planned to occur on Earth begins. Mars is something of a safe house. Makes you wonder if some of the many thousands of people who disappear yearly aren't transported to Mars to add to the human stock.
My only concern with Laura's mind-set is her hard focus on the "divine feminine" and its return to our consciousness as a major component to our well-being. It never left, but has been under the boot of those who feel it is too soft to let loose. I can understand it as metaphor, but choosing labels is taking corners. The yin and yang, the duality that is a thriving medium to the controllers, must thin out considerably if anything like the enlightened future she envisions ever happens. The many definitions of "God" must meld into a universal cauldron if any real strides toward unity ever takes hold. The negative and positive forces that are used to manipulate and throw weight around must come into balance, not supersede one way or the other.