It’s very interesting that at least some members of Congress haven’t bought into the whole extraterrestrial hypothesis that has dominated the national conversation about UFOs. Some are actually starting to figure out that all of this UFO business has nothing to do with ET and everything to do with “secret access programs” that are shielded from Congress, the executive branch and the public.
In this Daily Beast article, Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL), appears to suggest as much when he talks about hidden programs.
“We can’t over-classify this stuff,” Moskowitz told The Daily Beast in an interview. “The American people have a right to know. They have a right to some level of disclosure.”
He later goes on to say that perhaps Congress should look into the funding of secret programs that lack oversight and were alluded to in testimony by whistleblower David Grusch.
From the Daily Beast article:
Lawmakers say they were also left with questions about the use of tax dollars for UFOs after Grusch alleged Pentagon UFO programs are fueled by a “misappropriation of funds.”
“The funding issues that were brought up about how some of these projects are funded… I’d like to hear more about that,” Moskowitz said. “That’s the American taxpayer. That’s their money.”
You know my opinion: It was never ET. It was always Uncle Sam. It was Uncle Sam back in 1947 when Kenneth Arnold spotted a squadron of UFOs near Mount Rainier; during the flying saucer scare of 1952 over Washington, D.C., when, I speculate, President Harry Truman ordered a demonstration of these weapons much as he had arranged a similar demonstration of the flying wing in 1949, when the aircraft flew low over the capital; during the 1960s when startled pilots were reporting UFOs after observing flights of the top secret U-2 and SR-71; also during the 1960s at U.S. nuclear missile facilities, when, I propose, the military was testing a top-secret anti-missile technology capable of temporarily shutting down the rocket launch systems; in the 1980s over the Hudson Valley when bystanders including police officers saw a huge triangular thing floating overhead; in Belgium when hundreds of people witnessed the same sort of craft; and in 1997 over Phoenix, Ariz.; and again in 2000 over rural Illinois, when a raft of cops observed a similar delta-shape craft; then, in 2006 when employees at Chicago O’Hare saw a stealthy disc hovering overhead and abruptly shoot straight up at high speed, punching a hole in the cloud cover that lingered afterward; and, of course, in the various encounters described by U.S. Navy pilots.
So, it certainly appears that based on witness testimony the Pentagon evidently has achieved a propulsion breakthrough. Call it antigravity, if you like. I would argue that when you consider the pattern of UFO encounters going all the way back to the immediate postwar period, the U.S. has had some form of field propulsion technology either in development or in operation since that time. If this is true, then these systems have been evolving completely in the dark for more than 70 years and are well beyond the testing phase!
At the same time, there appears to be an ongoing disinformation program to make people think the UFOs are ET because as soon as you entangle the entire subject within the rhetorical quagmire of space aliens you relegate the whole story to the fringe. The public and the media don’t take it seriously. The only people who do take it seriously are those who are already convinced that it’s ET or are just cynically profiting off the space-alien hype.
It’s really a brilliant approach, one that has fooled even technical experts like Grusch, and likely involves the fabrication of fake data and bogus documents. After all, if the people constructing the disinformation are just as smart as the marks, it can be very effective.
And if you don’t think this professional-grade mendacity is working perfectly, ask yourself, what are we all talking about? Are we talking about whether the Pentagon might have achieved a quantum leap in propulsion technology, an advance so profound that it promises to alter the trajectory of the human race by ushering in a radical new means of transportation and enabling the practical colonization of space? No. We are asking whimsical questions about space aliens, time travel, interdimensional beings, and various ‘are we alone?’ scenarios.
But, hey, I’m not telling you anything you haven’t already considered. It’s all in Flying Saucers!