The former Air Force intelligence officer told Congress that the US is concealing a decades-long operation that retrieves and reverse engineers UFO's. The Pentagon has denied these claims.
Here's the deal. If the UFO/UAP/whatever things are physical and real, then we're totally screwed. Congresscritters can wail about national security implications but we can't defend ourselves against something that (a) we can't come anywhere near replicating, and (b) breaks our understanding of the laws of physics.
So basically, this is all sideshow. The government can have rotting alien biologic material all they want, it won't tell them anything meaningful. Their best bet would bring in a few hard science-fiction writers. The only thing I agree with is not flooding the media with details of all the unclassifiable stuff they've got.
The world has been sending out electro-mechanical space probes since the 1960s, the most famous of those, arguably the twin probes Voyager 1 & Voyager 2 in late summer 1977.
What do you suppose would be a logical origin of a truly unidentified/unrecognized hovering/flying/remotely controlled object - if all other origins native to Planet Earth were ruled out?
They're gonna have to bring in an actual alien in a wheelbarrow before I take this seriously.
Tintinnabulation - first place (Free Spirit)
Comet Q - second place (Quick and Risqué Sex)
Amnesia - third place (Le Noir Erotique)
I'm thinking that some of those 'reporters' and Senators now have some egg to wipe off their faces.
Nobody bothered to vet the stated qualifications nor any of his publicly available information (in this case, his legal issues - which didn't require any mysterious deep state agency to 'release his private medical records'.
I got the sense, by listening to Grusch when he first appeared everywhere, spouting off about what he 'heard' and didn't visually or physically witness. He comes off as a 'know it all' and appears to be rather excessively proud of himself as he speaks.
But the main point is - nobody released anyone's private medical records to try to sabotage the witnesses character. It was information readily available for anyone who might actually bother to spend 20 minutes searching databases on the internet. Admitting you have a drinking problem, and apparently also a suicide complex might not reflect well upon anything else he has to say about anything. Dude has a fairly recent track record of sketchy behavior.
https://theintercept.com/2023/08/09/ufo-david-grusch-clearance/
Quote by WellMadeMale
I'm thinking that some of those 'reporters' and Senators now have some egg to wipe off their faces.
Nobody bothered to vet the stated qualifications nor any of his publicly available information (in this case, his legal issues - which didn't require any mysterious deep state agency to 'release his private medical records'.
I got the sense, by listening to Grusch when he first appeared everywhere, spouting off about what he 'heard' and didn't visually or physically witness. He comes off as a 'know it all' and appears to be rather excessively proud of himself as he speaks.
But the main point is - nobody released anyone's private medical records to try to sabotage the witnesses character. It was information readily available for anyone who might actually bother to spend 20 minutes searching databases on the internet. Admitting you have a drinking problem, and apparently also a suicide complex might not reflect well upon anything else he has to say about anything. Dude has a fairly recent track record of sketchy behavior.
https://theintercept.com/2023/08/09/ufo-david-grusch-clearance/
That’s what the aliens want you to think. Wake up WMM.
░P░U░S░S░Y░ ░I░N░ ░B░I░O░
There are literally dozens of 'whistle blowers' who have been active in the UFO community for 2 to 20 years whose credibility is above reproach.
This was a lazy rush to bring out 2nd hand information from a guy who probably was told some stuff, but didn't have evidence to show to the public (only those with security clearances get to see the good shit). He had a coupla sketchy instances in his personal life over the last 15 years, along with some suicidal thoughts.
Hardly the best step forward - bringing him to DC.