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Pentagon Claims Congressional UFO Demand "Got Lost in the Mail"

Are UFOs real

The Pentagon just blew past a legally mandated deadline to release 46 classified UFO videos to Congress, claiming the congressional request "got lost in the mail."


Pentagon Claims Congressional UFO Demand "Got Lost in the Mail"

Representative Anna Paulina Luna expected 46 classified UFO videos on her desk by April 14th. Instead, she got what she called "deafening" silence from the Pentagon. When her office pressed for answers, Defense Department officials claimed her congressional letter requesting the footage was never passed to the "appropriate authorities."

The videos Luna demanded reportedly show Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena over Middle East war zones and near U.S. airports—objects performing maneuvers that defy known technology. Luna chairs a House task force on government transparency and cited potential national security threats from objects spotted near sensitive military installations. The Pentagon has promised delivery at an "unspecified future date," but the delay comes just months after a presidential directive ordering increased UAP transparency.

This isn't bureaucratic incompetence. When military officials testify about a database that's grown from 143 to over 400 UAP incidents in a single year, and Congress can't get basic footage compliance, the cover-up accusations write themselves.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: The same Pentagon that tracks enemy missiles across continents somehow can't locate a congressional letter about UFO videos—and expects us to believe it.

Source: bgr.com

A Navy Senior Chief Petty Officer sat before Congress and described watching a "Tic Tac-shaped" object emerge from the ocean and accelerate in ways that made America's most advanced fighter jets look like toys. His testimony wasn't alone—fighter pilots David Fravor and Ryan Graves joined whistleblower David Grusch in telling lawmakers about encounters with craft that operate beyond our technological understanding.

Grusch, a former intelligence official, told Congress he was denied access to what he described as a "multi-decade UAP crash retrieval and reverse-engineering program." Meanwhile, the official UAP incident database has exploded from 143 cases to over 400 in just twelve months. These aren't blurry photos from amateur sky-watchers—they're reports from trained military personnel with security clearances and reputations on the line.

The transformation is remarkable: for decades, reporting a UFO sighting could end a pilot's career. Now, staying silent about potential threats in U.S. airspace is becoming the career-killer. When objects routinely outperform the Pentagon's best equipment, the question shifts from "are they real?" to "whose are they?"

Gobbles Gobble's Take: Military witnesses describing ocean-emerging Tic Tacs before Congress means we've officially entered the timeline where UFO testimony is more credible than Pentagon excuses.

Source: Fox News

Scientists: Don't Expect Aliens, Do Expect Classified Tech Revelations

Sean Kirkpatrick, former head of the Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, has a blunt message for anyone hoping the government's UFO files will reveal alien visitors: "You will be unsatisfied." Scientists polled by CBS News overwhelmingly agree—but they're still eager to dig into the data for entirely different reasons.

Astrophysicists and researchers expect the files to reveal heavily redacted glimpses of advanced U.S. surveillance technologies that have been mistaken for otherworldly craft. Neil deGrasse Tyson believes most cases will demonstrate how easily "optical, climactic, and astronomical phenomena" fool even trained observers. NASA is deploying AI and machine learning to analyze the small percentage of truly unexplained incidents, hoping to shift the conversation "from sensationalism to science."

The real prize isn't proof of alien visitation—it's finding even one genuine anomaly that can't be explained by known technology or natural phenomena. After decades of stigma that kept serious scientists away from UAP research, the data dump represents the first chance for rigorous analysis of incidents that have puzzled military personnel for years.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: Even if every UFO turns out to be a weather balloon or secret drone, we're still about to learn our skies are hiding way more classified tech than anyone imagined.

Source: CBS News


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