This documentary in the New York Post by Steven Greenstreet offers an excellent – and sorely needed – skeptical view of the current state of UFO affairs in the United States.
It’s all pretty confusing, but my main takeaway is that the New York Times needs to set the record straight on its shoddy reporting on the subject. It seems evident that the Times’ coverage back in 2017 was slanted so that people would take UFOs seriously.
And there are some inaccuracies that need to be corrected, most notably that the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP) highlighted in 2017 didn’t really exist. This was evidently a fake name for something called the Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program, which apparently was tasked with investigating a range of paranormal entities at Skinwalker Ranch in Utah that included alleged encounters with ghosts, demons and various creatures and monsters.
As uncovered by Greenstreet, reporting in the Times excluded this fact, allegedly so that readers would take the report – and the whole subject of UFOS – seriously.
The Times, being the foremost paragon of American journalism, a pillar of the fourth estate, which we all depend on to deliver honest, deception-free reportage, needs to explain what happened here. After all, this article back in 2017 had consequences: It opened the floodgates for a torrent of UFO coverage and has led to actual congressional inquiry. Readers of the Old Gray Lady, and all Americans including members of Congress, deserve to know what happened here as the country grapples with the ongoing mystery of UFOs.