Keresés

Részletes keresés

<KRYPTO> Creative Commons License 2023.06.14 0 0 99654

Igen, és a fejlettebb civilizáció akár földi is lehet, például egy korábbi kihalt biológiai lényeké akik az emberiség előtt éltek itt, vagy velünk együtt élő eddig ismeretlené (földalatti, vízalatti, dimenzionális). Persze a földönkivüliek is szóba jöhetnek.

Előzmény: jee_c (99652)
Hoaxvadász Creative Commons License 2023.06.14 0 0 99653

"Gyorsan jegyezzük meg, hogy Garry Nolan stanfordi professzor, aki az első tudományos publikációt írta az említett egzotikus anyagok kapcsán, 100 százalékig biztos abban, hogy a bolygónkat idegen civilizáció mesterséges intelligencia vezérelte drónjai látogatják."

Előzmény: jee_c (99652)
jee_c Creative Commons License 2023.06.14 0 0 99652

Értem, kösz.

Ez eléggé szívás azoknak, akik az ő előadásán mesélik el a történetüket.

 

Közben bedobott egy érdekes videót a YT: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e2DqdOw6Uy4

 

Dr. Gary Nolan beszél arról, hogy milyen "dühös majmok csapata" vagyunk mi (az emeberiség), és hogy milyen módon tanulányozhat bennünket egy fejlettebb civilizáció (szerinte nem személyesen). Hogy hogyan befolyásolják a történelmünket (mert már régóta itt vannak, vagy a küldötteik /automaták?/ itt vannak).

Előzmény: <KRYPTO> (99644)
Mord Alexos Creative Commons License 2023.06.14 0 0 99651

ha van ez a problémád Dr. Greer személyével, akkor miért reklámoztad az előadását?

Kreezpeebékön  2020.04.28    0 0 95274

 


Close Encounters of the Fifth Kind presents the most controversial information ever released to the public. Whistleblowers and scientific experts bring viewers face to face with extraterrestrial visitors and their message for humanity.

DirectorMichael Mazzola

StarringDr. Steven GreerJeremy PivenDaniel Sheehan

GenresDocumentary

SubtitlesEnglish [CC]Audio

LanguagesEnglish

Előzmény: <KRYPTO> (99644)
Hoaxvadász Creative Commons License 2023.06.14 0 0 99650

UFO Whistleblower, Meet a Conspiracy-Loving Congress

Fresh claims from a former US intelligence officer about an “intact” alien craft may get traction on Capitol Hill, where some lawmakers want to believe.

"THE UNITED STATES Congress is strange enough without aliens, but here we are. Or is it, here they are?

Over a span of several months, members of the 118th Congress have gone from being transfixed by wind-propelled spy balloons to being mesmerized by a whistleblower’s claims that US intelligence officials possess “intact and partially intact non-human aircraft.” The whistleblower, former intelligence officer David Grusch, also claims that this and other evidence are being withheld from Congress.

“The allegations themselves are breathtaking,” says Senator Brian Schatz, a Hawaii Democrat. “It could be a game changer, or it could be a crank. I just don't know.”

Whether Grusch proves to be a crank or a game changer will likely soon be investigated by lawmakers from both parties and in both chambers of Congress. Skeptics abound, but there are also lawmakers who are curious and open to proof. Then there are the believers. 

In our strange new political universe of alternative facts turned dystopian reality, once-fringe notions have built-in fan bases in today’s Capitol. And in the House of Representatives, party leaders tapped Grusch’s allies to lead their chamber’s investigation.

On one level, it’s fitting that today’s conspiracy-laced Congress—where anti-vaxxers berate scientists, Election 2020 remains disputed, and January 6 rioters are praised as victims—is now tasked with tackling arguably the nation’s most long-standing conspiracy. But many senators fear their House counterpart’s melding of “deep state” with deep space will only sow more confusion into an electorate hungry for answers, which hearings about unidentified aircraft in recent years have failed to satisfactorily answer.

The Rank and File Are Flying the UAP

The sensational details of Grusch’s claims about so-called unidentified anomalous phenomena (or UAPs—NASA’s new name for UFOs) spread rapidly through the Capitol last week, along with much derision and mockery. Some congressional leaders laughed them off. "This is not a question I had on my bingo card,” House Democratic Caucus chair Pete Aguilar told the press corps. Or they slid these latest ET allegations right into their old talking points. "Obviously, we're concerned about Congress being kept in the dark from a lot of these agencies,” House majority leader Steve Scalise replied before even seeing the whistleblower’s claims.

The response was different among rank-and-file lawmakers, especially in the House, where the Grusch’s unvetted claims were seen as vindication by a small but vocal—and increasingly powerful—faction of far-right lawmakers who are heading up the inquiry ahead of a planned but still unscheduled hearing.

“I think it’s a little bit of madness and a whole lot of reality. I do believe we’ve recovered a craft at some point,” Representative Tim Burchett, a Tennessee Republican, told Steve Bannon on his podcast Wednesday. Burchett believes that the Pentagon’s budget is bloated, in part, because it’s funding secret UAP programs. His personal belief in UAPs stems from the 1947 incident in Roswell, New Mexico.  

When Grusch’s report dropped, some members of today’s far-right immediately suspected it was a false flag planted by the deep state. “We kind of felt, with everything going on, this is like the biggest misdirection play in history,” Bannon told Burchett. Their fears appear to have largely dissipated, however, with Burchett and his far-right allies now all-in on the investigation.  

Burchett told Bannon he “has a commitment” from both House speaker Kevin McCarthy and House Oversight Committee chair James Comer to hold a hearing on UAPs, though he says it’s not a top priority for party leaders. “We’re only going to get about one bite at the apple,” Burchett said.

If the Pentagon—which vigorously denies the whistleblower’s charges of a secret UAP program—or NASA officials ask to brief lawmakers behind closed doors, which is common when classified information is discussed, Burchett’s not interested. “I'm not gonna be a part of it if it's classified. That's ridiculous,” Burchett said on the podcast. “That's just more of the same and creates more myths and rumors than it creates facts.”

Burchett is joined by two Florida Republican representatives: Matt Gaetz—“I have seen evidence of craft that I am not familiar with any of our allies or adversaries or even our country possessing”—and Anna Paulina Luna, who believes the government has been lying to the public about UAP’s “for decades.”

While Luna and Burchett will likely head up the House inquiry and eventual hearing, it’s not just fringe-right members whose ears perked up over these allegations. This includes Representative Mike McCaul, a Texas Republican and chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “It’s a legitimate issue. On both sides, we just want to know if we've been seeing [UAPs] that are not man-made—is what the article said, but I don't know,” he says. “But that's a good question for the chairman” of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.

That’s why one of McCaul’s first reactions to the article was to forward it to the House Intelligence Committee chair, Mike Turner, whose office didn’t reply to multiple requests for comment.

The Senate Has Questions  

The Senate has also shown interest in UAPs in recent years, and the increased pressure on federal officials has produced results—including a massive spike in the number of UAPs the government monitors.   

In its June 2021 report, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence disclosed 144 UAP sightings stretching back nearly two decades. After years of mounting smartphone evidence, unanswered questions, and frustrated lawmakers, the military unveiled its newly rebooted and renamed All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO; pronounced “arrow”). 

With a department mandated with tracking secrets in the skies, sightings skyrocketed. Last August, AARO officials disclosed more than 500 reports of UAPs. By this April, here were some 650 cases. And just last month, the Pentagon, which oversees AARO, hiked the number to roughly 800 mysterious flying objects

While Grusch’s claims of alien life and recovered craft have made headlines, senators are alarmed by accusations that the federal government is hiding Special Access Programs from Congress.

“We need to just look into whether there are rogue SAP programs that no one is providing oversight for,” says Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, a New York Democrat who led the Senate’s April UAP hearing. “The goal for me will be to have a hearing on that at some point so that we can assess if these SAP’s actually exist.”

Gillibrand is sponsoring an amendment she hopes to attach to this year’s must-pass National Defense Authorization Act to mandate that no money can be spent on SAP’s unless it's been reported to Congress. “So if there are SAPs out there that are somehow outside of the normal chain of command and outside the normal appropriations process, they have to divulge that to Congress,” Gilibrand says.

As for whether she thinks there’s any veracity to the whistleblower’s claims? “I have no idea,” Gillibrand says. “So I'm going to do the work and analyze it and figure it out.”

Other senators say there isn’t much to figure out. “Generally, I would look skeptically at many of these reports,” says Senator Martin Heinrich, a New Mexico Democrat who serves on the Intelligence Committee. While Heinrich remains dubious of the whistleblower, he says UAPs are a conundrum the federal government must address.

“What I take seriously is sometimes we just have these really good, decorated pilots and navigating officers who are experiencing things that we can't explain, so we need to collect data so that we can figure out what is going on,” Heinrich says.

Still, among other senators, radio silence. WIRED sent an inquiry to Senate Intelligence Committee chair Mark Warner; in less than a minute, the Virginia Democrat’s staff replied, “We’re a no comment on this—thank you!”

When we caught the senator in the Capitol’s marble halls, Warner kept tripping over his own thoughts. “There's been a lot of incoming. Frankly, I just need to find out more information on this,” Warner says.

As for the accusation that the federal government has lied to Congress and hidden some SAPs for decades?  “We've heard these accusations before,” Warner says, before stopping himself, again. “Let me get some information first.”

“None of It’s Good”

Lawmakers are still awaiting more answers on the spy balloons that dominated the news—and American air space—at the start of the year, especially in regard to the four objects the Air Force shot down within an eight-day period this February. In the wake of those military engagements, the Biden administration held closed-door classified briefings for members of Congress, but they were less than straightforward, at least initially, until lawmakers pushed officials on UAPs.

“They were talking about the balloons, and then several senators pointed out, ‘Now hold on: We’ve had a lot of unidentified anomalous phenomenon for years now,’ and that’s when the military briefer was like, ‘True. True,’” says Senator Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican. “The takeaway from that is, they had thousands of sightings of these things over the years, which was news to me. So I'm not surprised, necessarily, by these latest allegations, because it sounds pretty close to what they kind of grudgingly admitted to us in the briefing.”

While not necessarily surprised by Grusch’s claims, lawmakers of all stripes are disturbed by reports of UAPs hovering over US military sites.

“It’s not good. None of it’s good,” Hawley says. “I think we want to get to the bottom of this. I think it’s disturbing.”

Előzmény: Hoaxvadász (99623)
Hoaxvadász Creative Commons License 2023.06.14 0 0 99649

David Grusch's DOPSR Cleared Statement and IG Complaint

"CLEARED For Open Publication
Apr 04 2023
Department of Defense
OFFICE OF PREPUBLICAITON AND SECURITY REVIEW

Mr. David C. Grusch

About the Author. Mr Grush has served as an intelligence officer for over 14 years, first as an U.S. Air Force officer attending the rank of major but also as a Senior Geospatial-Intelligence Capabilities Integration Officer for the National Geospatial Intelligence agency (NGA) at a civilian grade of GS-15 (Full-Bird Colonel military equivalent), achieving that position at the age of 35 as a rising star in the Intelligence Community as a known national expert in space control, electronic warfare, and cyber technical intelligence. He has a Bachelor of Science degree in Physics and a Master of Arts with Honors in Intelligence Studies amongst numerous awards and decorations for his service to the nation, both for combat service in Afghanistan and his participation covert and clandestine operations to advance American security. Mr. Grush is a U.S. intelligence community whistleblower

Summary

In May 2022 I became the first government official in the history of the United States to file an Intelligence Community Inspector General (ICIG) whistleblower complaint on credible detailed information I gathered as a member of the Unidentified Aerial (now Anomalous) Phenomena Task Force (UAPTF) on a publicly unknown Cold War for recovered and exploited physical material that has been waged under the noise-floor for decades. I disclosed this evidence under oath to the ICIG, along with close colleagues of mine that found the strength to come forward to support my complaint in what we saw as an unfathomable ethical and constitutional dilemma. The ICIG found this testimony credible and urgent for Congress in July 2022 and a summary was immediately submitted to the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) and the congressional intelligence committees the HPSCI and SSCI. I traveled to DC to provide closed door testimony on the matter

How did I ever get myself involved in this? A question I’ve constantly asked myself over the last 4 years. In my professional career and quite frankly my entire life up to that point, I never even thought any of this was possibly true, as I grew up with an average belief system and world-outlook in the blue-collar town of Pittsburgh, PA. However in December 2017 I was reading the New York Times and a story caught my eye claiming a UFO (UAP) program called the Advanced Aerospace threat identification Program (AATIP) was being run out of an office in the Pentagon I was familiar with, the office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security (OUSD(I&S)). I had no idea this topic was being taken seriously by the department, as I had given very little thoughts on UFOs or so-called “extraterrestrials” in my entire adult life. Furthermore, I was formally educated in Physics and Astronomy and consider myself a very black-and-white intelligence officer requiring substantial empirical data to make high confidence assessments. Even after reading that article and performing a public-domain literature review, I was skeptical, this sounded to me as probably misidentified near-peer adversarial technology and observer bias. While working at the national reconnaissance office (NRO) in their operations centre as a USAF military reservist, I was asked by my boss if I'd like to be their representative for the newly formed Navy-led UAPTF

I agreed to join the UAPTF, hopefully to confirm a negative to prove this was all misidentification, witness error, or a flight of fantasy. Once I started digging, interviewing witnesses, asking senior government mentors of mine what was really going on here, unexpected doors started to open and others were brutally shut in my face, Many powerful officials were unhappy I was asking these questions."

Mord Alexos Creative Commons License 2023.06.14 0 0 99648

ne beszélj félre, az nem hamisítvány volt.

Előzmény: <KRYPTO> (99644)
Fat old Sun Creative Commons License 2023.06.14 -1 0 99647

A hülyeségnek beláthatatlan mélységei vannak, tudjuk.

Előzmény: Kreezpeebékön (99646)
Kreezpeebékön Creative Commons License 2023.06.13 0 0 99646
Fat old Sun Creative Commons License 2023.06.13 -1 0 99645

Azért elég szar érzés lehet az ufóbuziknak, hogy állandóan rohadt komoly dolgokról van szó, aztán mindig bevágják az ajtót az orruk előtt.

Nem csoda, ha frusztráltak lesznek...

Előzmény: <KRYPTO> (99637)
<KRYPTO> Creative Commons License 2023.06.13 0 0 99644

Az a probléma Dr. Greer személyével, hogy kihasználja a jóhiszemű ufók iránt érdeklődőket, komoly pénzeket követelve az előadásaiért azzal indokolva, hogy ő orvosként súlyos anyagi áldozatokat hoz mivel nem praktizál.

 

Így bármi komoly anyag kerülhet a birtokába sajnos leértékelődik hihetőség szerint.

 

Egy példa csak az Atacama sivatagból előkerült földönkívülinek kikiáltott múmiának, Greer orvosként nem ismerte fel a hamisítványt.

Előzmény: jee_c (99642)
jee_c Creative Commons License 2023.06.13 0 0 99643

Belenéztem másik részeibe is, hát elég meredek.

Előzmény: jee_c (99642)
jee_c Creative Commons License 2023.06.13 0 0 99642

Belenéztem, belepörgettem és nekem nem tűnt kamunak a dolog.

Nem néztem meg az egészet, nem tudom, hogy milyen volt az összes előadó, de az a kettő, akikaet láttam, hitelesnek tűnt.

 

Miért a sarlatán minősítés? Mire vonatkozik?

Előzmény: Kreezpeebékön (99639)
Dormammu Creative Commons License 2023.06.13 0 2 99641

A stílus maga az ember.

Előzmény: Mord Alexos (99640)
Mord Alexos Creative Commons License 2023.06.13 0 0 99640

hogy egy klasszikust idézzek: lófasz fog ott folyni, nem komoly dolgok.

Előzmény: <KRYPTO> (99637)
Kreezpeebékön Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 0 0 99639

A sarlatánok ékes példája.

Előzmény: Kreezpeebékön (99638)
Kreezpeebékön Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 0 0 99638
<KRYPTO> Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 0 1 99637

Amilyen ravaszok ráfogták a kínaiakra a valódi ufókat. A nyílt kongresszusi konferencián is zárt ajtók mögött tárgyalták a komolyabb ügyeket. A következő  sem lesz máshogy. 

Előzmény: egylambos (99632)
1trabis Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 -1 0 99636

ebből nagy botrány lesz.

ha mindenki előtt világossá válik, hogy az adófizetők pénzét a légtér biztonságának őrzése helyett dinóhódokra költötték, akkor fejek fognak hullani.

hülye amerikaiak, amerikai hülyék.

Előzmény: egylambos (99632)
Mord Alexos Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 -1 0 99635

szövegértés nem (sem) megy, azt látom.

nem a cikkekről írtam, hanem a beszélgetésről.

Előzmény: Dormammu (99633)
Dormammu Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 0 1 99634

Vannak ép ufók is. A Grusch azt mondta, hogy pilótáik/utasaik is voltak/vannak.

Előzmény: egylambos (99630)
Dormammu Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 -1 1 99633

Mit nem értettél a magyarul leírtakból?

 

Amúgy te másolgatsz ide angol szöveget, úgyhogy a saját udvarodon söprögess:

https://forum.index.hu/Article/viewArticle?a=164603820&t=9003012

Előzmény: Mord Alexos (99629)
egylambos Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 0 1 99632

In a new Washington Examiner piece, national security reporter Tom Rogan writes that Stratton’s Pentagon UFO task force “was diverting government resources to researching truly unconventional UFOs at the expense of addressing Chinese balloons” and that Jay Stratton “was reluctant” to confront the balloon problem. 

 

Hogyan várható el, hogy egy lehetséges földönkívüli jelenlétet vizsgáló UFO-program, kínai kémlufikkal foglalkozzon, önmagát is lejáratva.

Előzmény: 1trabis (99631)
1trabis Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 -1 0 99631

‘Crazy’ UFO-believing Pentagon bosses missed spy craft for years

"The Post was right. The “UFO” story is fake news.

After a gigantic Chinese spy balloon flew over America, the mainstream media and some Congressional leaders are still looking for “aliens.”

And it’s now reported that the Pentagon missed several incursions of foreign spy craft for years because they were instead looking for UFOs.

How did this happen?

It seems a small group of UFO activists spent years misleading a credulous media and an oblivious Congress.

On December 16, 2017, the New York Times released a bombshell story about a Pentagon “UFO program” called the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP).

The Times reported that Nevada Senator Harry Reid spearheaded the creation of AATIP, which was funded with $22 million to study strange unidentified objects flying over America’s skies.

This story, unsurprisingly, went viral and UFOs became a red-hot topic overnight.

Two days after it was published, Lue Elizondo, the former Pentagon official who the Times claimed was the director of AATIP, went on CNN to talk about the otherworldly UFOs that AATIP had allegedly studied.

He stated these “anomalous” crafts were “defying the laws of aerodynamics” and ended his interview by announcing: “We may not be alone.”

News headlines the following day repeated Elizondo’s maybe-it’s-aliens announcement and sent shockwaves around the world.

Over the next five years, this now-legendary story was repeated thousands of times in the media.

Elizondo, who declined to comment for this story, would become a minor celebrity, appearing on primetime cable news, starring in a History Channel series and landing a book deal. And the UFO hysteria, which began with that one New York Times story, has now culminated with Congress taking official action to hunt UFOs.

But most of that story was false.

As exclusively reported by the Postthe Pentagon didn’t actually have an official UFO program called AATIP and Elizondo was not its director.

In 2019, the Pentagon released a statement saying Elizondo had “no responsibilities” with AATIP, a program which they also said wasn’t created to investigate UFOs.

This official statement contradicted the claims of The New York Times and Elizondo, but hardly any outlets bothered to report it.

In 2021, Elizondo filed a complaint with the DOD’s Inspector General’s office (DOD/OIG) claiming that the Pentagon denying his role with AATIP was part of a “disinformation” campaign to discredit him.

But recently released documents from the DOD/OIG state that no evidence was found to support Elizondo’s claims of any such campaign against him. Danny Sheehan, Elizondo’s lawyer, confirmed with the Post that the DOD/OIG dismissed his complaint.

Elizondo did not return requests for comment.

The story starts in 2007, when a scientist at the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), James Lacatski, says he read a book about Skinwalker Ranch — a supposed paranormal hotspot in Utah that some claim is home to UFOs, ghosts, werewolves and all kinds of monsters.

After reading the book (an evidence-free compilation of spooky stories), Lacatski wrote to Robert Bigelow — the ranch’s owner, a real-estate mogul and long-time believer in all things paranormal — and asked if he could visit.

Within minutes of his arrival at the ranch on a sunny afternoon, Lacatski claimed in his self-published book and on a 2021 radio interview, he saw a small, yellow apparition appear in mid-air inside a kitchen before disappearing a few seconds later.

According to his book, it was enough to convince him that something spooky was going on at Skinwalker Ranch.

Lacatski then went to the home of Nevada Senator Harry Reid, a longtime friend of Bigelow’s and a believer in UFOs.

Lacatski told Reid about his Skinwalker “experience” and shared his theory that UFOs, ghosts and monsters were possibly all part of the same “phenomena.”

According to Reid’s interview with New York Magazine, Lacatski said, “Something should be done about this. Somebody should study it.” Reid agreed.

And that’s how the Advanced Aerospace Weapons System Application Program (AAWSAP) was born.

But how could they convince Congress to spend taxpayer money on a Pentagon program to study ghosts and goblins? Simple. They just wouldn’t mention ghosts and goblins.

When creating the official language for the program’s objective, Reid told New York magazine, Lacatski intentionally left out any mention of UFOs or spooky things at Skinwalker Ranch.

AAWSAP’s objective, as drafted by Lacatski, was to use current technology trends to predict what types of aerospace technology foreign adversaries might have in the year 2050.

In August 2008, the Pentagon awarded the program’s $22 million contract to the sole bidder: Bigelow, owner of Skinwalker Ranch and a financial supporter of Reid’s political career.

From 2009-2010, led by James Lacatski at DIA, the Bigelow AAWSAP contractors chased UFOs around the world and hunted monsters at Skinwalker Ranch.

In his book about the program, Lacatski and two other Bigelow associates describe various encounters with poltergeists, flying saucers, monster owls and werewolves.

In one instance, while walking around the ranch in the middle of the night, the three claim they encountered a half-dinosaur, half-beaver creature. The investigators say they had cameras — but forgot to snap a picture of the beast as it slowly walked by them.

According to Lacatski, he kept all this a secret from officials at the Pentagon because he feared the program would be shut down.

“They had no idea I was running Skinwalker Ranch. They had no idea whatsoever,” Lacatski bragged during a rare public interview in 2021.

But once the AAWSAP contractors began submitting paranormal reports to the Department of Defense, the cat was out of the bag.

Publicly, the Pentagon stated it had “concerns” and deemed the reports “of limited value.” But behind the scenes, there was shock and outrage.

One DOD insider told The New Yorker that the Pentagon “worried that if all this came out, that the government was spending money on this, this will be a bad story.”

Fearing AAWSAP was on the chopping block, Sen. Reid submitted a Hail Mary request that the program be made top secret, thus protecting it from naysayers.

But in his request letter, Reid didn’t say “AAWSAP” — apparently because Pentagon officials were now upset about “AAWSAP.”

Instead, Reid referred to the embattled program with a “made up” nickname: AATIP.

Reid’s request was denied and AAWSAP (nicknamed AATIP) was shut down in 2012.

But in 2017, long-time UFO activist Leslie Kean pitched a story to the New York Times about a Pentagon UFO program called “AATIP” and Lue Elizondo, the guy was ran the program.

The Times ran the story — but with no mention of AAWSAP, or James Lacatski, or ghosts and werewolves at Skinwalker Ranch.

Kean, who co-authored the Times article, admitted to a Showtime documentary crew that her objective with the article was “getting people to accept [UFOs]” and to “try to get credibility for the topic.”

But, according to former AAWSAP contractor Colm Kelleher, Kean left out 97% of the true story. (Kean declined to comment.)

In February 2023, the Pentagon confirmed to the Post that AATIP was just a nickname for AAWSAP, a non-UFO program which shut down in 2012.

Quoting then-Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence James Clapper, the DOD states, “The AATIP that Senator Reid refers to is officially the Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Application Program (AAWSAP).”

As for any official UFO program,” the Pentagon has stated it didn’t even have one prior from 2007 to 2018.

So AATIP, a Pentagon UFO program that never officially existed, and Elizondo, the man who officially wasn’t its director, stole the limelight for five years.

Meanwhile, the jilted and uncredited members of AAWSAP refused to give up their quest for aliens and monsters and were working quietly behind the scenes to move the paranormal needle.

In 2018, some of the first Pentagon officials to brief Congress on these so-called UFOs were former members of AAWSAP.

Among them was Eric Davis, a former AAWSAP contractor who had cited psychic spoon bending in a paper written for the Air Force. A celebrity in UFO circles, Davis told Congressional leaders that some UFOs were “off-world vehicles not made on this Earth.”

This obviously sent some elected officials into a tizzy. And the media — informed by former members of AAWSAP — ate it up.

Documents released via the Freedom of Information Act reveal that AAWSAP/Skinwalker Ranch alum Jay Stratton provided UFO information to a Pentagon press office responsible for crafting official statements to the media.

And who was in charge, during the Trump administration, when the Pentagon created a UFO Task Force to investigate incursions of unknown objects over America?

Stratton — who believes the ghosts and creatures of Skinwalker Ranch are real — officially headed up these Pentagon investigations for years.

The “chief scientist” of this Pentagon task force was Travis Taylor, who is and was a co-star of “Ancient Aliens” on the History Channel. He currently stars on “The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch” on the same network.

Among his many paranormal claims, Taylor believes a Skinwalker poltergeist chopped off one of his chickens’ heads. (Taylor declined to comment.)

Stratton and Taylor’s Pentagon Task Force was charged with identifying things like Chinese spycraft flying over American airspace. But reportedly, and perhaps unsurprisingly, they only saw “UFOs.”

In a new Washington Examiner piece, national security reporter Tom Rogan writes that Stratton’s Pentagon UFO task force “was diverting government resources to researching truly unconventional UFOs at the expense of addressing Chinese balloons” and that Jay Stratton “was reluctant” to confront the balloon problem. 

A former DOD official, who worked with the task force and spoke to The Post on the condition of anonymity, said Stratton was “a complete nutjob” and that most of what the task force did was a “complete and utter waste of money.”

The official claimed Stratton would talk about “the wolf man stalking his house” and other spooky stories stemming from Skinwalker Ranch.

Shocked and fed up, the source and others protested about their “crazy” boss to Pentagon brass.

“We had to go to leadership and tell them we’re done with his s–t,” the source said.

Stratton did not reply to The Post’s requests for comment.  

He retired from the Pentagon in 2022 and, soon after, military officials were reportedly able to retroactively determine some of the “UFOs” were actually spy balloons.

It appears that a small group of UFO believers distracted the media and Congress into looking for extraterrestrial UFOs while, in reality, terrestrial spycraft were brazenly flying over America with impunity. 
In a tweeted video, Senator Marco Rubio states that “No one took it seriously because immediately it was about UFOs and flying saucers and aliens.”

But, rather than getting fixed, the same mistakes are seemingly still being made.
Some of the same UFO activists involved in the fake 2017 New York Times story lobbied Congressional leaders like Senators Kristen Gillibrand and Marco Rubio to create a new UFO program, called the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).
AARO is reportedly looking into an “avocado UFO” from 1945 and investigating whether flying saucers turned off American nuclear weapons in 1967.

Official government documents show the latter case is a hoax, but that isn’t stopping the AARO from asking for lots of taxpayer money for investigations. 

On March 4 and 5, Jay Stratton and Travis Taylor appeared at “Alien Con,” a popular annual convention for UFO fans in Pasadena, California, to talk about their experiences working for the Pentagon UFO Task Force.

It’s unknown if the two, now retired from the government, will be subpoenaed to do the same by a Congress and White House currently demanding answers about how and why we missed foreign spy craft over American skies for years."



Előzmény: egylambos (99630)
egylambos Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 0 1 99630

A tény az, hogy jön az újabb kormányzati vizsgálat az eltitkolt ufóroncsok ügyében is. A tényeket, meg ne keverjük a szekpók által leírt összeesküvéselméletekkel.

Mord Alexos Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 -1 0 99629

ez egy magyar nyelvű topik, magyar nyelven folyik a beszélgetés.

próbáld tartani magad ehhez.

Előzmény: Dormammu (99624)
egylambos Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 0 1 99628

Fikció.

Előzmény: 1trabis (99627)
1trabis Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 -1 0 99627

nem, ezek a tények.

Előzmény: egylambos (99626)
egylambos Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 0 1 99626

Pontosabban UFO-összeesküvés konteója. :-)

Előzmény: egylambos (99625)
egylambos Creative Commons License 2023.06.12 0 1 99625

Ez már a szkepók UFO konteója. :-)

Előzmény: Hoaxvadász (99623)

Ha kedveled azért, ha nem azért nyomj egy lájkot a Fórumért!