Alien reproduction vehicles, or first edition?
Bob Lazar shocked the world with his claims that the U.S. government was back-engineering UFOs in the 1980s. He claimed that private government contractors, such as EG&G, were in possession of at least 9 of these aircraft.
According to Lazar’s testimony, one of these aircraft, which he referred to as the ‘sport model’ was a thin, disc-shaped object…
Another one was said to have been recovered in an archaeological dig—let that sink in.
Since that time, many have debated the authenticity of Lazar’s story.
What we do know is that since his seismic testimony, many details that he shared have since proven to be true, such as the orientation of these objects before they take off, and the existence of element 115.
Now we are witnessing something extremely curious…
The National Intelligence Manager for Aviation has a new logo and in this logo, there is a classic disc-shaped UFO in the bottom left-hand corner…
A lot of people want to say this is simply a part of a psy-ops operation.
One theory is that the U.S. government is attempting to slowly launch a fake alien invasion, or use the classic excuse of the ‘national security threat’ to obtain more funding for the military.
While this may be true, it still doesn’t answer the most important questions or address any of the important issues.
We know that the U.S. military has been encountering these unknowns since the 1940s. Are we truly supposed to believe that the government or some foreign enemy has been secretly manufacturing Electrogravitic aircraft since then?
Are we seriously supposed to believe that our military, and the cutting edge of the military-industrial complex, takes great pains to research and develop conventional aircraft when these things have been readily available since the 1940s?
Why hasn’t this technology become the standard of warfare in the ensuing 75 years?
UFOs display incredible capabilities that are any commanding general’s wet dream. Are we seriously supposed to believe that we are in complete control of this tech, yet still spend trillions to develop the F-35?
This type of tech would give the United States unprecedented full spectrum-dominance—far beyond the full spectrum-dominance that the U.S. military touts today.
Let’s forget about the U.S. Air Force entirely. Accounts of these craft have occurred long before the Air Force and the United States even existed.
Sightings of these objects predate the discovery of electricity. As I mentioned earlier, at least one of the recovered UFOs, rumored to be in the possession of EG&G, was reportedly recovered in an archeological dig…
One final detail from Lazar’s incredible story is that while reverse engineering programs exist, they aren’t very successful at all, and very little progress has been made over the last 75 years.
The extent of these tests, according to him, involves researchers flying these craft, but to his knowledge, a faithful replica has not yet been manufactured.
So why does the National Intelligence Manager for Aviation’s new logo include a UFO?
My theory is that these things are just as much a mystery to them as they are to us—a legitimate cause for intelligence investigation.
I believe that the U.S. government knows that these objects are interplanetary, but beyond that, they don’t know much more than the general public.
Here’s the latest buzz:
Friends
I told you some time ago: the US government plans to slowly disclose that UFOs exist.
Now look at the new logo for the National Intelligence Manager for Aviation.
It shows a UFO – alongside standard military aircraft.
This is very deliberate and hugely significant! pic.twitter.com/B6Cmw4enxX
— Uri Geller (@theurigeller) September 26, 2022
Not a bad new logo for the National Intelligence Manager for Aviation. A Lazar UFO in the official seal? Hahahhahaha. Radical. I still can’t believe they did this…https://t.co/1ieSIxq2Qt#UFO pic.twitter.com/bt6nedTZe6
— Jeremy Kenyon Lockyer Corbell (@JeremyCorbell) September 25, 2022
Live Science recently reported:
The U.S. Navy holds unseen videos of unidentified flying objects (UFOs) — or unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), as the Department of Defense (DOD) prefers to call them — but will not release the footage publicly because it would “harm national security,” a Navy spokesperson wrote Wednesday (Sept. 7).
This is an actual new US government logo. #UFOSightings #ufotwitter #UFO pic.twitter.com/FQSAlDNVlz
— Tim (@yobaldeagle) September 26, 2022
ODNI's National Intelligence Manager for Aviation revealed their new seal.
Something look… 🛸familiar? Don't miss that blue triangle, either.
Recall also that NIM-A prepared the UAP report, alongside the UAP Task Force; and their Executive Director is from the U.S. Air Force. pic.twitter.com/ODm3S0Pi3o
— John Greenewald, Jr. (@blackvaultcom) September 25, 2022
U.S. Congressman Tim Burchett recently made this claim, according to Mirror:
He said: “Plenty of military pilots have reported UAP encounters that have no logical explanation.
“Some of them have warned it was only a matter of time before an aircraft got into a mid-air collision with an unexplained object.”
Join the conversation!
Please share your thoughts about this article below. We value your opinions, and would love to see you add to the discussion!