Did the Smithsonian really receive oversized human bones and then lose or deny them?
The guests assert there are documentary claims that the Smithsonian received large bones and coffins (dating in some accounts to the 1950s–1980s) but later could not locate them or denied possession. The transcript describes requests for access being stonewalled and at least one instance where the institution admitted
Why is the Smithsonian said to be exempt from certain artifact‑return laws?
According to the discussion, the Smithsonian, as a government institution, is exempt from some laws requiring museums to return Native American funeral artifacts to tribes, which critics say gives it broader discretion over those collections.
What evidence is cited for giants in North America?
Examples cited include Native American oral traditions about giants, the Lovelock Cave finds (red hair, oversized sandals and clothing), and accounts of large bone discoveries that researchers claim ended up in institutional collections.
What is the G. E. Kincaid story and why is it significant here?
G. E. Kincaid reportedly explored a walled entrance in the Grand Canyon circa 1908–1909, described an ancient city and giant artifacts, and later failed to return for a planned expedition. The site is now restricted, and supporters say government interference around it suggests suppression.
Why do the speakers believe the government would suppress this kind of evidence?
They argue there is a long‑standing effort by U.S. authorities to dismiss or control narratives that imply supernatural or anomalous elements in human history, preferring strictly natural explanations and discouraging public inquiry into contradictory evidence.