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Pentagon Theorizes: “UFO's are Alien Motherships”
The official in charge of a Pentagon effort to investigate unexplained aerial incursions has co-authored an academic paper that presents the theory that recent unidentified flying objects could actually be alien probes from a mothership sent to study earth. In a draft paper, Sean Kirkpatrick, head of the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), and Harvard professor Avi Loeb teamed up to write that the UFO's, which appear to defy all physics, could be, quote, “probes from an extraterrestrial parent craft.” After the Harvard professor posted the draft paper online, it gained notoriety from circulation on news outlets. The draft paper discusses the possibility that the unexplained UFO's the Department of Defense is studying could be “probes” in the mothership scenario. One section of the draft paper is titled: “The Extraterrestrial Possibility.” 
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suzilight · 9 months
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NASA on Thursday evening released the name of its new point person for UFOs, hours after refusing to do so over concerns he would be harassed.
Mark McInerney, who was previously NASA’s liaison to the Defense Department, will become the research director for UAP — unidentified anomalous phenomena, the government’s preferred term — overseeing the space agency’s work on the topic and serving as a communicator between federal agencies on UFOs.
Sept. 14, 2023
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esotericworld · 1 year
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Still need to read Jacques Vallee’s recent book on the Trinity UAP crash.
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ufoteacherofficial · 5 months
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Organizations like Americans for Safe Aerospace, the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office have played a key role in U.S. Congressional disclosure.
In terms of First Contact preparedness, will this embolden the U.S. Congress to make intelligence agencies and the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) release their UAP and UFO research and data gathered over the past 70 years?
What are your thoughts on this? Join the conversation.
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Photo by Mike Stoll on Unsplash
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truegeorge · 1 year
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UFO Retrieval Program
               Earlier last week one of my fellow word press buddies John Junior sent me this news report from a mainstream source. The report talks about a former military intelligence officer blowing the whistle disclosing that the US government has been collecting crashed extraterrestrial aircraft for decades. Airforce veteran David Gresham has lodged a whistle blower complaint with the…
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heardabout · 1 year
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starfleetdesign · 1 year
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Cannikin1701 has recreated classic scenes from The Original Series with the new Enterprise from Discovery/Strange New Worlds. (Or rather, the straight-nacelled concept that John Eaves had conceived of.)
I especially like this one riffing on 'Tomorrow is Yesterday' that imitates the 'real' UFO footage the DoD released in 2017.
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singularfortean · 9 months
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What do you think of the new AARO website?
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the-grand-author-ne · 9 months
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Hey remember that time Carrie Poppy tried to test just how ridiculous a statement Linda Molton Howe, a self proclaimed ufologist who claimed to be in contact with dozens of former CIA FBI and DOD agents who came to her to be whistleblowers and expose the government's lies about aliens, would repeat to a crowd? How Carrie wrote on a greeting card in glitter gel pen that she was former CIA and that dogs were secretly physic super aliens here to help us, and the government had suppressed their abilities through the creation of breeds and the subsequent inbreeding weakened the dogs, then handed that card to one of Linda's friends at a convention saying it was from a stranger she didn't know who asked her to give it to the man for Linda, and then Linda read the note and did indeed start regurgitating the idea that dogs are a superspecies of alien hybrids to her followers and got other members of the UFO community to start repeating it, and now it's part of the mythos forever against Carrie's will because she really thought the gel pens and dog stickers on the dollar store greeting card would tip Linda off that it was a hoax? No? Because you don't listen to Oh No Ross And Carrie, a free podcast delving into the worlds of conspiracy, scams, psychic, cults, etc?
Your loss.
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bapzap · 10 months
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cant wait to watch this congressional hearing about a intelligence agent whose former job was investigating UFOs whistleblowing about the DoD having UFOs they've been hiding from congress
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Crashed UFOs? Non-human 'biologics'? Professor asks: Where's the evidence?
Congressional testimony this week about reverse engineering from crashed UFOs and the recovery of non-human "biologics" sounds like science fiction.
And that's the realm in which it will remain unless scientific and other hard evidence enters the picture, says Northeastern University assistant physics professor Jonathan Blazek.
He says he finds it "very frustrating" that former intelligence officer David Grusch "back(ed) away from specifics" in his July 26 testimony before a House Oversight subcommittee on national security.
"I think what I find most surprising is that lawmakers seem to be taking him so seriously at this point. I'm sure they know things that I don't," Blazek says.
Grusch, a U.S. Air Force veteran who previously worked at the National Reconnaissance Office, told members of Congress that the U.S. is operating a secret crash retrieval and reverse engineering program and that he "knows the exact location" of unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs) in the government's possession.
He also said that remains of non-humans had been recovered and that he knew of people who have been harmed or injured in connection with the phenomena.
As startling as his testimony was, Grusch did not offer firsthand accounts or corroborating evidence of his claims, saying repeatedly that "I can't discuss that publicly."
Where's the evidence?
"I don't find Grusch very credible," says Blazek, who read a summary report of the hearing.
Besides lacking specificity, Grusch has made "increasingly implausible claims," including telling News Nation that allegedly retrieved crafts could come from other physical dimensions, Blazek says.
It may be that members of Congress "don't want to be seen as suppressing anything, so it's better to be transparent about the sorts of claims being made," he says.
"Hopefully this is part of a process to get everything out into the open so that the community can proceed to look into the more credible and/or actually mysterious things."
"I don't think this particular hearing will make the public take the claims of 'aliens' more seriously," says Blazek, whose primary focus is on understanding the universe using astronomical surveys that cover large areas of the sky.
He says he is looking forward to a report from an independent NASA panel of highly regarded scientists who are looking into the origins of UAPs, be they optical illusions or atmospheric or stranger phenomena.
The panel, which includes retired astronaut Scott Kelly, is scheduled to release a published report any day now. The publication date was originally set for the end of July.
What UFO enthusiasts have to say
Some civilians who investigate UFO reports also question Grusch's testimony.
"The UFO 'street' has understood that material and bodies have been in U.S. custody since 1947," says Bob Spearing, the director of international investigations for MUFON, the Mutual UFO Network.
"This is nothing new except this was allegedly told under oath. That's telling," Spearing says, adding that he is speaking as an individual and not for MUFON.
He questioned whether Grusch's testimony is "a slow turn towards disclosure" or part of a campaign to mislead the public as well as foreign adversaries.
"Until they show the physical evidence, caution dictates it is a misinformation campaign. I think it is all orchestrated," Spearing says.
Serious study of UFOs
Long the subject of official derision, UFO reports are increasingly being taken seriously, at least on paper.
The Department of Defense established the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office to identify UAPs that might pose a threat to national security in 2022—five years after a blockbuster New York Times story about a secretive DOD UFO program.
The Times also showed the world a declassified video of Navy fighter pilots being outmaneuvered by an oval object that traveled at seemingly mind-boggling rates of speed.
Two of the pilots included in the Times coverage, retired Navy Commander David Fravor and former Navy fighter pilot Ryan Graves, also gave testimony during the July 26 House hearing and described their first-hand, in-flight encounters.
So far, however, the Pentagon has not officially acknowledged the existence of off-earth UAPs.
Sean M. Kirkpatrick, AARO's first director, testified during the open portion of a Senate Committee on Armed Services in April that his office "has found no credible evidence thus far of extraterrestrial activity, off-world technology or objects that defy the known laws of physics."
Grusch previously worked with AARO's predecessor, the UAP Task Force.
Is more information on the way?
As wary as Grusch was about revealing details of his explosive claims—which he says came from interviewing dozens of witnesses—he said several times during the July 26 hearing that he would discuss issues further in a SCIF or sound-proof room for officials with appropriate security clearances.
In the meantime, Blazek is looking forward to hearing what scientists on NASA's independent panel on UAPs have to report.
"There's probably been a realization in the last decades that the culture around this has gotten sort of toxic, on both sides," Blazek told Northeastern Global News following the NASA panel's first public meeting May 31.
"Actual explanations for some of these events would be really interesting."
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shyearthquakedaze · 6 months
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gravityofforteana · 1 year
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Archives of the Impossible conference | Flash Talk: Colm A. Kelleher
Colm A. Kelleher, program manager of the Advanced Aerospace System Weapons Application Program (AAWSAP) and a contractor at the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), presented a talk titled "UFOs and Psi Phenomena: Lessons Learned from the Pentagon’s AAWSAP UFO Investigations" as part of "Archives of the Impossible: Transnationalism, Transdisciplinarity, Transcendence." The May 11-13, 2023 international conference at Rice University featured speakers and panelists who set out to demystify the paranormal through their research and experiences regarding metaphysics, UFOs and much more.
Between 1991-1996, Kelleher was an immunology research scientist at the National Jewish Center in Denver, Colorado. From 1996-2004, he led the National Institute for Discovery Science (NIDS) team on Skinwalker Ranch as well as multiple other NIDS projects. From 2004-2008, he served as laboratory director at San Francisco biotechnology company Prosetta where he led teams of scientists in executing Department of Defense (DoD) contracts to discover drugs against Ebola virus and other viruses of interest to DoD.
In 2008, Kelleher became deputy administrator of Bigelow Aerospace Advanced Space Studies (BAASS) where he led the day-to day operations in executing the AAWSAP contract with Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). From 2012-2020, he led the Environmental Control and Life Support Systems (ECLSS) Department at Bigelow Aerospace where he managed projects that cumulatively resulted in the building of life support systems for expandable spacecraft in Low Earth Orbit (LEO). Kelleher co-authored "Hunt for the Skinwalker" in 2005 with journalist George Knapp and "Skinwalkers at the Pentagon" in 2021 with James Lacatski and George Knapp.
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esotericworld · 1 year
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Scientists and military are taking UFOs much more seriously than you probably are. People have died. Albeit, perhaps not intentionally.
Forensic neuroimaging expert Christopher Green says he has dealt with 'hundreds of patients' who were injured or died after interacting with UFOs 
'I'm the go-to physician in the Department of Defense for unexplained morbidity and mortality,' he told DailyMail.com in an exclusive interview 
'I do look at injuries and mortality from unidentified UAPs (unidentified aerial phenomena),' he added 
Green, a professor at the Wayne State School of Medicine in Detroit, was in 2010 commissioned to write a paper by a secret $22M defense program  
He described symptoms of multiple sclerosis, brain damage, and burns among patients from '[Close Encounters of the Third and Fourth Kind] events' 
He said symptoms of many of the cases were similar to 'Havana Syndrome' - a mysterious illness affecting diplomats and US officials in embassies around the world
Green said many of his patients experienced burns and brain damage and that around one in ten died within seven years of their reported encounter “
Hundreds of military officers have had injuries including brain damage and burns after encounters with UFOs, a top brain expert and former CIA officer has revealed.
Detroit Professor Christopher Green was commissioned around 2010 by a secret $22million defense program monitoring UFOs, to write a paper on injuries from close encounters with 'anomalous' craft.
In an exclusive interview with DailyMail.com the forensic neuroimaging expert, who has worked with the CIA since the 1960s, said he dealt with 'hundreds of patients' including special forces officers and other military personnel hurt after interacting with unidentified craft, some of whom later died.
Some of the injuries resembled the mysterious 'Havana Syndrome', which intelligence agencies believe could be a series of clandestine attacks on US diplomats by a foreign power using targeted microwaves...
But Green's paper focused on cases of US government and military personnel with similar injuries referred to him decades before 'Havana Syndrome' was identified.
The professor refused to discuss his 2009 DoD-commissioned research paper in detail citing his oath to keep classified secrets, but added that his was one of 38 studies commissioned by the $22million initiative called the Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program (AAWSAP), overseen by the Defense Intelligence Agency from 2007 to 2012.
'I had said some things in the paper that they [the DIA] did not want me to say,' he told DailyMail.com. 
'The reason I was told was, I referred to radio frequencies as having to do with alien spacecraft, and UFOs...
'I think that there are serious people in the Department of Defense who believe that some of the objects that are identified as 'unidentified flying objects' are real, and are extraterrestrial.
'It's reasonable that reasonable people are concerned about that.'
The former Assistant National Intelligence Officer for Science and Technology, who described himself as having been 'an intelligence officer for the government since 1969,' said that as well as writing his 2010 study on injuries from UFOs, he has also for decades treated classified cases of soldiers injured in unexplained ways, referred to him by government officials.
'Because I'm a forensic neurologist and a brain imager, I'm the go-to physician in the Department of Defense for unexplained morbidity and mortality,' Green said.
'I do look at injuries and mortality from unidentified UAPs.
'My client population is heavily within intelligence, Department of Defense, Special Forces, aerospace industry, people that work under contract for aerospace companies that get ill and they don't know why.
'What my cases are exposed to are things they see in daylight, with witnesses under battle conditions, in circumstances of test and evaluation at advanced facilities.'
Green said many of his patients experienced burns and brain damage from their encounters with 'unidentified aerial phenomena'.
He listed his patients' varied descriptions of getting up close to a 'big drone', a 'silent drone' – or something even stranger.
'Sometimes they hovered. Sometimes they moved in odd ways,' he said. 'Some did show clear, advanced cloaking. Some did show emanations of funny lights, patterns and strobes.
'There are a lot of cases of things that instantaneously appear and instantaneously disappear. 
'There are a lot that will instantly disappear and then instantly appear close by but in another angle of sight. In a blink of an eye it will not appear to be directly ahead of you but will appear to be 30 degrees to the right, or 30 degrees to the left.
'Some of them did come close, and make them become unconscious and they woke up burned or injured.'
Green said around one in ten of his patients died within seven years of their reported encounter.
A small percentage of the professor's patients even said they encountered 'something cloaked that was a human being'.
He said he was even aware of injuries from encounters with UFOs 'near the White House' and over the Capitol Mall, though he said he had not personally treated any of those cases and declined to comment further...
Dr. Green wrote that the injuries to humans from getting too close to UFOs could give clues as to how the strange craft work, including hypotheses about how they use strong electromagnetic fields for propulsion.
'The purpose of this paper is to argue that data exists to 'reverse engineer' propulsion systems of anomalous aerospace vehicles,' Green's paper said.
One theory is that UFOs bend the fabric of spacetime to allow them to defy gravity, and in doing so turn the heat from their engines into high-energy microwaves or ultraviolet waves in a process called 'blue shifting'.
Anyone who gets too close to those UFOs while their engines are on would be hit with a blast of radiation, scientists hypothesize.
Green referenced the Cash-Landrum case in his study, where two women famously sued the US government over illness resembling radiation exposure after allegedly encountering a diamond-shaped UFO on a Texas country road in 1980 that hovered in front of them, caused their car to heat up, then was escorted away by dozens of Chinook helicopters.
A disturbing UFO injury case investigated under the DIA's AAWSAP contract was described in an October 2021 book co-authored by two of the program's managers.
A 48-year-old biotechnologist given the pseudonym Ron Becker by the authors told AAWSAP investigators he was with his daughter driving 50 miles southeast of Bend, Oregon in May 2005 when they saw three blue orbs flying about in a field a hundred yards away.
Father and daughter told AAWSAP manager and book co-author Colm Kelleher that as they watched, the softball-sized orbs flew towards them and through their vehicle, one passing through Becker's arm and chest.
In the days after Becker felt dizzy and nauseous, began losing hair and started losing his sight and hearing. Blood tests over the next two years showed severe abnormalities and he was diagnosed with a rare cancer in his chest.   
Pilots who witnessed the famous 'tic tac' white oblong UFO flying around a US aircraft carrier off the coast of San Diego were among those who suffered physiological effects, according to a book published last year by two managers of the DoD's secret $22million program...
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