#blackbudget

Ex-military pilots including @wardcarroll say UFOs could be products of Pentagon ‘black budget’  

Interesting, albeit very brief, article in Britain’s Daily Star newspaper quoting ex-military pilots Ward ‘Mooch’ Carroll and Brian ‘Sunshine’ Sinclair speculating that some of the more sensational UFOs could be top secret U.S. platforms developed within the Pentagon’s black budget, which would conceal these programs from Congress.

https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/weird-news/fighter-jet-pilots-say-pentagon-30776191

It appears that people are finally starting to realize that the Pentagon has probably developed an advanced propulsion technology and that the UFOs are likely terrestrial.

So, along those lines, if, for example, the so-called Tic Tac vehicle observed by Navy pilots isn’t ET. Then it’s the Pentagon. Theory would suggest that a vehicle exhibiting that kind of performance is tapping into a different kind of physics, perhaps the much-speculated “fifth force” being investigated by physicists, which wouldn’t necessarily subject its pilots to the same crushing g-forces caused by traditional chemical propulsion systems.

U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., has recently made some VERY intriguing comments that appear to support the idea that some of the UFOs encountered by Navy pilots could be the product of “secret access programs” developed and operated entirely in the dark without oversight from Congress.

(Her comments can be heard in this video recorded Aug. 14, 2023, by The Post-Star newspaper in Glens Falls, N.Y., https://poststar.com/u-s-sen-kirsten-gillibrand-discusses-uaps/video_a1403028-3adc-11ee-95e2-6f6281509e11.html)

Information about these weapons could be restricted to those with a “need to know” only, Gillibrand said. She also, VERY interestingly, compares the covertness surrounding current secret access programs to extreme measures taken during the Manhattan Project, suggesting potential whistleblowers may be literally afraid to come forward, fearing “under penalty of death” language in non-disclosure agreements.

Here is a segment that I transcribed from the video posted by The Post-Star newspaper:

Gillibrand: “So, Oppenheimer is about developing the bomb during World War II. And all those scientists who worked on that project had to sign non-disclosure agreements. And what I’ve heard about those non-disclosure agreements is that because it was wartime it had provisions that said including if you disclose under penalty of death.  And so the big worry is that the people who signed non-disclosure agreements to work on any type of program for the military that it had language in there that made them think that that was true. So, there is a lot of fear. So, I don’t know if we’ll ever get to the bottom of it. I don’t know if we’ll ever get the information about special access programs that are need-to-know only, that Congress is not read in on. I’m trying to get to the bottom of it. I put a provision in the defense bill this year that said you can’t fund any special access programs if you don’t go through Congress …”

Without some clarity, it’s impossible to know exactly what Sen. Gillibrand is saying, but she seems to be alluding to a conflict between Congress and the Pentagon, with the Pentagon apparently restricting access to information that is directly related to UFO sightings.

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, in the 1960s when startled pilots were filing UFO reports after observing overflights of the top secret U-2 and SR-71, and it is today as well. Based on witness testimony, the Pentagon evidently has achieved a propulsion breakthrough – call it antigravity, if you like. However, officials can’t admit that it has antigravity because, well, then it would no longer be secret. It all makes perfect sense, in a convoluted kind of way.

I would argue that when you consider the pattern of UFO encounters going all the way back to Arnold’s seminal sighting that the U.S. has had some form of field propulsion technology either in development or in operation since then. If this is true, then these systems have been evolving steadily and entirely in the dark for the past 75 years.

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 extraterrestrials or are just making money off the ET hypothesis.

It’s really a brilliant approach, one that has fooled even technical experts like whistleblower David 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? No. We are asking whimsical questions about space aliens, time travel, interdimensional beings, and various ‘are we alone?’ scenarios.

Anyway, if the Pentagon does, indeed, have antigravity, this raises a whole host of follow-up concerns and questions, including:

  • Do we have a shadow space program that runs parallel to NASA and the Space Force? If so, do we have military bases in deep space?
  • When the SR-71 blackbird was retired in 1990, was it replaced by another, more advanced platform capable of reaching any destination in the world quickly and on short notice, or was it simply superseded by satellites and drones, as is conventional wisdom?
  • In addition to antigravity, have we developed a propulsion system that harnesses the Casimir effect? This might explain the incredible performance observed by police officers in southern Illinois in 2000. At least one of the officers said the ship darted from place to place inexplicably in the blink of an eye.
  • If we have developed such a propulsion system, have we gone interstellar?     

At any rate, I contend these advanced aerospace platforms are well beyond the test phase but are fully operational. This might explain why some of the encounters have happened over U.S. military training ranges.

But, hey, I’m not telling you anything you don’t already know. It’s all in Flying Saucers!