#TheJoeRoganExperience

Grusch’s UFO Disinformation Campaign – Whether Deliberate or Otherwise – Is Working, as Illustrated in His Most Recent Claims on Joe Rogan’s Podcast

I’ve written before about what appears to be an extensive, relentless and highly effective Pentagon disinformation program to confuse, distract and deceive the public and the media about the entire subject of UFOs. In the latest chapter of this brilliant, ongoing disinformation juggernaut, we have UFO whistleblower David Grusch making a series of bizarre claims about UFOs on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast. Among his revelations: The Pentagon has recovered at least 10 alien bodies, a former U.S. president (presumably Obama) told him about said aliens, etc., etc.

Maybe he actually believes these things. Who knows? But from a practical standpoint, it really doesn’t matter whether he does or doesn’t. The result is the same: The public and the mainstream media pretty much ignore whether the Pentagon might have developed astonishing breakthroughs in propulsion technology, a quantum leap so outrageous that it might easily be mistaken for alien spacecraft. Instead, we have story after story posing the question, “Are we alone?”

Anyway, here are various articles about Grusch’s latest claims:

UFO whistleblower calls out congressmen in Joe Rogan interview

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/ex-us-intelligence-office-claims-us-has-variety-of-alien-bodies-4602888

https://www.news.com.au/technology/science/space/ufo-whistleblower-claims-us-has-variety-of-alien-bodies-interactions-may-have-occurred/news-story/158491ea3bb98e6a4e43574eb937b2dc

Grusch’s most recent complaint is that GOP Representatives Mike Turner of Ohio and Mike Rogers of Alabama are trying to block the disclosure of ET by not supporting a proposed amendment to the country’s annual defense bill that would force the U.S. government and the Pentagon to disclose programs related to space aliens.

At any rate, as I was saying, whether Grusch is part of, or a victim of, the Pentagon’s professional-grade disinformation machine, the result is the same: People (and the majority of the American media) read these articles with a chuckle and then look the other way.

And it all fits the same playbook going back decades. You find a source with impressive credentials. Then, you inject said source into the public domain either as a willing participant or a dupe, and you watch the media churn.

In the end, people are left scratching their heads, but that’s about it.

No one suspects that the entire operation is part of an effort to lead the media astray so that journalists won’t suspect that the Pentagon has made a series of propulsion breakthroughs, hidden in plain sight under the guise of ET visitations.

And if you don’t think the strategy is working, look at who’s paying attention to Grusch’s latest proclamations: VIRTUALLY NOBODY!

I mean, after all, if Mr. Grusch is not a willing purveyor of disinformation, then we have to assume he was led to believe these things through a sophisticated effort that included faked documents, data, photos, bogus eye-witness claims, etc. In other words, he was fed disinformation from people on the inside. Yet, no U.S. media organs have shown any overt interest in learning how or why this occurred and who’s responsible.

I would argue that the Grusch saga fits perfectly into the legacy of a well-organized disinformation machine going all the way back to 1952, when generals in full military panoply told journalists those saucers over Washington, D.C., were caused by an atmospheric phenomenon called a “temperature inversion.”

In actuality, I propose, those UFO sightings over our nation’s capital were part of a demonstration ordered by President Truman to prove the superiority of these vehicles. After all, Truman had ordered a similar demonstration earlier in his presidency for the Flying Wing aircraft, which flew over Pennsylvania Avenue at rooftop level in 1949.

Unfortunately for Northrop Corporation, the event was later marred by engine failure, setting back the project.

Not so for the flying saucers demonstration. In fact, under this “terrestrial hypothesis” for UFOs – i.e., it’s not ET, but human beings who invented antigravity — Truman was so intrigued that he ordered a follow-up flyover the next weekend to see how well the machines would outperform state-of-the-art jet fighters.

Well, they performed magnificently, which would have engendered more financial backing for the fledgling antigravity program.