Eldönthenéd, hogy a Pentagon ufókra szakosodott vezetője éppen pánikban van-e, vagy az ő nyilatkozata idézi-e elő a pánikot, ami a korábbi álláspont volt.
Grusch hitelességét viszont nem vonja kétségbe, a kongresszusi meghallgatások a bizonyíték rá. A gerinctelen szarkavarás a személye ellen csak újabb bizonyíték a pánikra amelyet az UFO/UAP téma előidézett.
< ... nem a rendőrségtől szivárogtatták ki a Grusch adatait.>
az lehet, hogy az interjúban ezt mondják, nem igazán érdekel.
a saját szememnek jobban hiszek:
"But police records obtained by The Intercept under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act reveal that on October 1, 2018, Grusch was committed to a mental health facility based in part on a report that he “made a suicidal statement” after Grusch’s wife told him he was an alcoholic and suggested that he get help.
“Husband asked [complainant] to kill him,” a police incident report produced by the Loudoun County sheriff states. “He is very angry guns are locked up.”
(...) The records were not confidential, medical, or leaked. They are publicly available law enforcement records obtained under a routine Virginia FOIA request to the Loudoun County Sheriff’s Office and provided by the office’s FOIA coordinator. Copies of The Intercept’s correspondence with the sheriff’s office are being published with this story."
Nem értetted az interjút, világosan többbször is mondták, hogy nem a rendőrségtől szivárogtatták ki a Grusch adatait. Amit ebben az esetben jelentéktelen, mivel irreleváns és csak szarkeverésre használják.
és hol állította Kirkpatrick, hogy Grusch azt állította volna, hogy ő (Grusch) az ő (Kirkpatrick) csapatának volt a tagja?
értelmezni kellene a leírtakat:
"But in his statement Kirkpatrick called the testimony 'insulting' and claims Grusch was 'never a representative' TO his unit, officially called the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO). The claims directly contradict Grusch's previous description of his government roles, vetted by both the House Oversight Committee and media, that he served as the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency (NGA) lead on UFOs reporting to AARO until April this year."
Persze, ha arról van szó, hogy elérjenek valamit, egy ember életének a tönkretétele nem nagy ár. Komoly negatív hatása van annak valaki karrierjére, hogy ha ilyen adatok ki vannak teregetve a nyilvánosság számára. Továbbá egy igen negatív üzenet ez azoknak, akik orvosi segítséget keresnének hasonló problémákkal.
De ez nem UAP/UFpO kérdés. Ami erre vonatkozik: úgy tűnik két erő működik a háttérben: az egyik nyilvánosságra akar hozni UAP-pal kapcsolatos dolgokat, a másik el akarja tusolni, ennek a két erőnek az ütközését láthatjuk most.
"The records were not confidential, medical, nor leaked. They are publicly available law enforcement records obtained under a routine Virginia FOIA request to the Loudoun County Sheriff’s Office and provided by the office’s FOIA coordinator. Copies of The Intercept’s correspondence with the sheriff’s office are being published with this story."
Amikor a Pentagon ufókra szakosodott vezetője nyilatkozik az már a vég (az ufóbuzik számára). Érthető a zavar a sötét erőben, évtizedes ufóbuzi okoskodás és nagyotmondás omlik össze a tények ismeretében.
"A former colleague of Grusch’s expressed shock that he retained his clearance after the 2014 incident, which was also documented in public records obtained by The Intercept.
“I think it’s like any insular group: Once you’re in, they generally protect their own,” said the former colleague, who asked not to be named because they feared professional reprisals."
Grusch átment a munkájához szükséges nemzetbiztonsági szűrésen, ez bizonyítja, hogy alkalmas volt a beosztásának elvégzésére. 37 évesen GS-15 szinten volt, ami nem sok kormánydolgozónak sikerül.
Szóval nem érdemes az ufóerdőben nyitott szájjal rohangálni.
The historic Congressional hearing on UFOs had two red flags sitting front and center. Jeremy Corbell and George Knapp, both with a dubious history of reporting fake UFO stories, not only have a relationship with Congress's UFO "witnesses", like David Grusch, but also played a direct role in the hearing itself. Skeptic Mick West and the Post's Steven Greenstreet breakdown the "baffling" and "ridiculous" influence Corbell and Knapp have over Congress.
The star witness of Congress’s UFO hearings, David Grusch, retained his clearance despite alleged substance abuse issues, FOIA documents reveal.
“NON-HUMAN” BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL recovered from purported UFO crash sites. A decadeslong secret program to reverse-engineer extraterrestrial aircraft. A government cover-up employing “administrative terrorism” to silence truth-tellers.
These are some of the extraordinary claims made to Congress by Maj. David Grusch, a 36-year-old retired Air Force intelligence officer who also served as an adviser to the Pentagon’s Unidentified Aerial Phenomena task force. Last month, the House Oversight Committee opened an investigation after Grusch claimed he was retaliated against for blowing the whistle on the U.S. government’s alleged UAP recovery program.
Security clearances of the sort Grusch has held are subject to strict requirements, including regarding psychological episodes and substance issues. Grusch has used his high-level clearance to shore up his credibility, telling the committee: “I was cleared to literally all relevant compartments and in a position of extreme trust in both my military and civilian capacities.”
But police records obtained by The Intercept under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act reveal that on October 1, 2018, Grusch was committed to a mental health facility based in part on a report that he “made a suicidal statement” after Grusch’s wife told him he was an alcoholic and suggested that he get help. (...) The records were not confidential, medical, nor leaked. They are publicly available law enforcement records obtained under a routine Virginia FOIA request to the Loudoun County Sheriff’s Office and provided by the office’s FOIA coordinator. Copies of The Intercept’s correspondence with the sheriff’s office are being published with this story."
"But in his statement Kirkpatrick called the testimony 'insulting' and claimsGrusch was 'never a representative' to his unit, officially called the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).">
erre nagyon kiváncsi lennék, egy másik ufóbuzi fikanick szerint ugyanis Kirkpatrick szava szentnek számít, lásd:
Amikor a Pentagon ufókra szakosodott vezetője nyilatkozik az már a vég (a vérszkepók számára). Érthető a zavar a sötét erőben, évtizedes szkepó okoskodás és tiltakozás omlik össze a tények ismeretében.
te most legerinctelenszarháziztad az USA hírszerzőit?
"Coulthart believes someone inside the intelligence community leaked Grusch’s medical records to the outlet."
és erre az állításra mit lépsz?
"But in his statement Kirkpatrick called the testimony 'insulting' and claimsGrusch was 'never a representative' to his unit, officially called the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO)."
NewsNation’s exclusive interview with UFO whistleblower David Grusch sparked international attention with his claim the U.S. government has secretly been in possession of nonhuman spacecraft. Investigative journalist Ross Coulthart says Grusch believes the government may be behind an effort to release his public health records in an effort to smear him. Grusch told NewsNation he suffered from PTSD after returning home from Afghanistan and was still allowed to keep his security clearance after receiving help. Grusch said The Intercept plans to publish an article about incidents highlighting his previous struggles. Coulthart believes someone inside the intelligence community leaked Grusch’s medical records to the outlet.
"The head of the Pentagon's UFO office has slammed Wednesday's shocking congressional hearing in which three whistleblowers claimed they had firsthand encounters or knowledge about secret government programs involving technology that is 'non-human.'
Sean Kirkpatrick issued a statement Friday denying some of the witnesses' claims – drawing a fiery rebuke from lawmakers.
David Grusch, a former top intelligence official, on Wednesday testified that in his role liaising with Kirkpatrick's office on UFOs he discovered the government was keeping crashed non-human spacecraft secret from the public and, illegally, from Congress.
But in his statement Kirkpatrick called the testimony 'insulting' and claims Grusch was 'never a representative' to his unit, officially called the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO)."