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The Pentagon's Official Excuse: The Dog Ate Our UFO Tapes

Are UFOs real

The Pentagon told Congress it couldn't deliver 46 classified UFO videos because the letter requesting them got lost in the mail โ€” and it's using that as its official excuse.


The Pentagon's Official Excuse: The Dog Ate Our UFO Tapes

On April 14th, the Pentagon blew past a formal, legally binding deadline to hand over 46 specific classified UAP videos to Congress. Representative Anna Paulina Luna โ€” chair of the House Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets โ€” hadn't asked for a vague summary. She wanted footage: the Lake Huron shootdown, multiple spherical objects filmed moving in and out of the water near a U.S. submarine, and more. When the deadline passed in silence, her office started making calls.

The official response from the world's most advanced military organization? A clerical error. Luna's office was told her letter "did not pass to the appropriate authorities." She called the explanation "convenient" on X, adding: "whoever is trying to be cute at the Pentagon can take a hike." The videos are now promised at an "unspecified future date" โ€” a phrase that, in Pentagon time, could mean next week or never.

What makes the fumble sting more: the footage in question is reportedly full-color and high-resolution, a dramatic step beyond the grainy black-and-white thermal clips that have defined public UAP disclosure so far. A lost letter is now standing between the American public and what may be the clearest evidence ever recorded of objects defying known physics near sensitive military installations.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: The organization that built stealth bombers and tracked Soviet nukes in real time apparently cannot operate a mail room.

Source: BGR


Military Witnesses Are Now Going on Camera About UFOs at Vandenberg

A new documentary called The Age of Disclosure features active-duty and retired U.S. military personnel going on record about UAP encounters at Vandenberg Space Force Base โ€” one of the most sensitive launch and satellite facilities in the country. The servicemen describe objects that appeared without warning, moved in ways no known aircraft can replicate, and triggered security responses that were never officially acknowledged.

Vandenberg has surfaced in UAP research before, but the testimonies in this film add granular operational detail: specific locations on the base, timeframes, chain-of-command reactions, and โ€” in at least one account โ€” descriptions of objects that shadowed active missile tests. These aren't fringe voices. These are people with security clearances who spent careers in proximity to America's most classified aerospace programs.

The documentary arrives at a moment when congressional pressure for disclosure is at its highest point since the Church Committee hearings of the 1970s, giving these accounts an institutional weight they would have lacked even five years ago. The men on screen aren't asking to be believed โ€” they're describing what they saw and leaving the conclusions to the viewer.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: When the people whose entire career was built on not talking start talking, that's not a publicity stunt โ€” that's a pressure valve releasing.

Source: The Santa Barbara Independent


Something Has Been Watching Our Nukes for 80 Years

A new analysis by the Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies โ€” an organization of scientists and researchers who cross-reference declassified government archives โ€” concludes that UAPs have maintained a "sustained, disproportionate pattern of presence" around America's nuclear weapons facilities from 1945 through 1975. The researchers matched Project Blue Book "unknowns" against NICAP archives and found the pattern wasn't random. It was strategic.

The objects behaved, the study argues, like "a small, mobile reconnaissance force operating under tight resource constraints." Their tactics evolved over three decades: bold daylight approaches in the late 1940s gave way to stealthier nocturnal operations by the mid-1960s. When military interceptors were scrambled, the objects demonstrated awareness โ€” extinguishing lights, changing course, withdrawing. A separate statistical analysis published earlier this month found that unexplained aerial light bursts during the 1950s were 68% more likely to occur the day after an above-ground nuclear weapons test.

Together, the two studies suggest that whatever is behind these phenomena has been paying closer attention to humanity's capacity for self-annihilation than most governments have been willing to admit. Eighty years is not a coincidence. It's a vigil.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: We spent the Cold War terrified the Soviets were watching our nukes โ€” turns out something else may have beaten them to it.

Source: The Independent


Colorado Has 3,892 UFO Reports โ€” and One Valley That Skews Everything

Skip Roswell. If the data is right, Colorado's San Luis Valley โ€” a remote, high-altitude basin in the southern part of the state โ€” has one of the highest per-capita UAP sighting rates of any location in the United States. Colorado overall ranks 14th nationally, with 3,892 official reports logged, but the Valley's numbers punch well above its population weight.

Denver isn't exempt: the metro area reports 43.2 sightings per 100,000 residents, compared to a national average of 34.3. Researchers point to a combination of factors โ€” exceptional atmospheric clarity at elevation, vast dark-sky plains, and a dense military footprint that includes Cheyenne Mountain Complex and Schriever Space Force Base, the nerve center of U.S. space operations. The most reported shapes track national patterns: orbs and lights account for 38% of sightings, followed by triangles at 16% and classic discs at 14%.

What the data can't explain is why the San Luis Valley specifically generates anomalous reports across decades, from cattle mutilation cases in the 1970s to modern drone-like objects that local law enforcement has been unable to identify. The valley sits at roughly 7,500 feet, surrounded by 14,000-foot peaks โ€” and whatever keeps appearing there apparently doesn't need a runway.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: Colorado residents aren't more gullible than the rest of the country โ€” they just have better visibility and more military secrets overhead.

Source: The Coloradoan


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The Pentagon's Official Excuse: The Dog Ate Our UFO Tapes โ€” Are UFOs real