We live in truly interesting times…
I have long been fascinated with the UFO/UAP topic and have written on it numerous times; these sightings reportedly stretch far back into history—before the modern age, modern science, and the discovery of electricity.
A foreign drone or an undisclosed black project that displays some of the incredible capabilities of these UAPs is a paltry yet acceptable excuse in 2022, but 1945? 1561?
We know that the U.S. government has been studying UFOs for at least 70 years now—and that’s just what they tell us.
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For years we have heard whispers and rumors from many trained observers, military personnel, and everyday civilians, of something astounding in our airspace and over our skies, yet these accounts were largely hushed up and discredited.
5 years ago, the New York Times published a seismic and groundbreaking report that changed history forever—officially revealing that these objects are real and the U.S. government takes an extreme interest in them…
Since that time, we have seen the number of anomalous reports swell to over 400 and the revelation that at least some of these objects may be trans medium—having the ability to seamlessly operate between air, sea, and space.
The latest twist in the UFO/UAP topic comes in the form of language and provisions buried in the $858 billion defense bill…
In what many are calling a historical moment for the UFO/UAP topic, whistleblower protections for any government employee previously under a non-disclosure agreement and a sweeping historical review going back to 1945 are among just some of the items included in the defense bill.
Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Christopher Mellon recently pointed out:
The lack of news coverage compels me to point out that President Biden has just signed into law far-reaching legislation that could solve the UAP mystery: https://t.co/E1kpGcMSiW
— Christopher K. Mellon (@ChrisKMellon) December 24, 2022
The moment it happened – The Senate has passed the annual defense authorization bill in a vote 83-11, sending the $858 billion measure to President Biden’s desk for signature just before the year-end deadline.
What does this mean for the #UFO subject?👇#ufotwitter #UFOs #UAP pic.twitter.com/mW6WHpxtgl
— Dan Zetterström (@TheZignal) December 16, 2022
Christopher Mellon writes:
Even before this ‘whistleblower’ legislation was signed into law, credible individuals were providing Congress
information alleging that the US government has recovered extraterrestrial technology. This process began in 2019 when I brought astrophysicist Dr. Eric Davis to Capitol Hill to meet with staff from the Senate Intelligence and Armed Services committees.
Dr. Davis, author of the famous Wilson-Davis memo, provided specific information lending credence to sensational reports that an official US government program is actively seeking to exploit recovered technology that was fashioned by some other species or perhaps advanced AI machines.
I’ll simply venture to predict that the facts, when they emerge, will directly contradict recent reporting in the Wall Street Journal by Holman Jenkins Jr. and Seth Shostak, as well as reporting in the New York Times by Julian Barnes, which claims that conventional explanations have been found for most of the UAP reports identified by DoD and the IC. I believe that the report, when it emerges, will deepen the UAP mystery rather than provide explanations for the burgeoning number of UAP incidents involving violations of US airspace.
The 5th anniversary of the @nytimes story about the US Navy UFO videos and the Pentagon's AATIP program is on December 16. We now have a NASA study, Congressional briefings/hearings, and numerous UFO provisions in the new Defense Bill. Interesting times!https://t.co/OnV5snxEyi
— Nick Pope (@nickpopemod) December 14, 2022
When is the press going to figure out that a bipartisan Congressional committee doesn't put nearly three dozen pages of UAP material in a defense bill just because some UFO "enthusiasts" asked them to? 🤔 #UFOTwitter
— David Bates (@DavidBWriter) December 8, 2022
The Debrief highlights some of the historical UFO/UAP provisions of the defense bill:
Significantly, Sec. 1673 of the FY 2023 NDAA also outlines protections for U.S. personnel that have signed any such agreements, allowing them to come forward with any information and report their involvement with such programs to AARO, and to Congress.
Specifically, the language within Sec. 1673 outlines provisions for any Federal Government programs and their employees, as well as contractors within those programs, related to unidentified anomalous phenomena, “including with respect to material retrieval, material analysis, reverse engineering, research and development, detecting and tracking, developmental or operational testing, and security protections and enforcement.”
Language within the bill also states that the historical review and survey of non-disclosure agreements is to be completed by AARO within an eighteen month period following the NDAA being signed into law.
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