By now, I’m sure everyone is completely aware of the fact that there is a lot going on right now in the world. With the war in Ukraine, unrest in the West Bank, rising economical inequalities within the U.S., to name a few. Perhaps it is because of these trying times that Congress has made the decision to focus on what’s happening outside of the world.
Bizarrely, for the first time in over 50 years, a House committee will be holding a public hearing on UFOs.
Congress has continued to push the Pentagon and other national security agencies to answer questions on reported of mysterious aircrafts violating protected airspace.
The bombshell New York Times article published in 2017 exposed the existence of the Pentagon’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program and as a result, the government has disclosed more and more about what it knows and what it doesn’t about UFOs.
So far it seems that there is a lot of documentation of the aircraft that is unable to be explained. Not long ago, the Pentagon had released three videos of naval aviators coming into contact with something that flew with technology not known to us.
The upcoming hearing comes after a release of a report in June 2021 from the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) describing over 144 UFO cases observed and reported by military aircrafts that spanned between 2004 to 2021.
Here’s what the DNI stated:
“The limited amount of high-quality reporting on unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) hampers our ability to draw firm conclusions about the nature or intent of UAP.”
More details of this report from The Daily Wire:
Although some reported incidents could be the result of “sensor errors, spoofing, or observer misperception,” the report stated that there were likely multiple types of unidentified aerial phenomena requiring different explanations.
Citing the reluctance of some observers to relate what they had experienced, the report added, “Although the effects of these stigmas have lessened as senior members of the scientific, policy, military, and intelligence communities engage on the topic seriously in public, reputational risk may keep many observers silent, complicating scientific pursuit of the topic.”
The DNI said that the report “provides an overview for policymakers of the challenges associated with characterizing the potential threat posed by UAP.”
In April, The Daily Wire noted, “Documents from a 2010 report from the now-defunct Advanced Aviation Threat Identification Program (AATIP), a program funded by the Pentagon, claim that Americans who encountered UFOs had suffered radiation burns, brain and nervous system damage.”
Those documents, part of 1,500 pages released to The Sun, which originally filed a Freedom of Information Act request in 2017, stated, “Sufficient incidents/accidents have been accurately reported, and medical data acquired, as to support a hypothesis that some advanced systems are already deployed, and opaque to full US understandings.”
“The report — titled Anomalous Acute And Subacute Field Effects on Human and Biological Tissues — investigates injuries to ‘human observers by anomalous advanced aerospace systems,’” The Sun reported, adding that the report also stated that humans had been injured from “exposures to anomalous vehicles, especially airborne and when in close proximity. … The report noted that often these injuries are related to electromagnetic radiation – and links them to ‘energy related propulsion systems.’”
And how many answers will we receive from the open hearings? Not sure, however, that will most likely depend on how much you actually trust the Pentagon.
Two current Pentagon officials will be testifying. We’ll see how forthcoming they feel like being.
Souces: DailyWire, The New York Times, The Sun