Seventeen earthquakes rocked Area 51 in a single 24-hour window — and nobody in an official uniform is explaining why.
Roswell's Missing Tapes Just Resurfaced — And the Air Force Voices On Them Sound Rattled
Seventy-nine years after something crashed outside Roswell, New Mexico, newly discovered Air Force audio recordings have surfaced containing discussions from military personnel involved in the immediate aftermath. This is the same event the Air Force first described as a "flying disc" recovery — then, within days, reclassified as a weather balloon. The recordings aren't a confession, but they capture something the polished official statements never did: the raw urgency and confusion of the hours before the cover story was locked in.
What makes these tapes particularly significant is what's been missing for decades. Key Roswell documents and witness testimonies have quietly disappeared from official archives over the years — a pattern that researchers at outlets like The Debrief have documented in detail. Audio from the personnel on the ground, before the spin machine engaged, fills a gap that no subsequent Air Force report ever addressed. The voices don't resolve the mystery, but they complicate the comfortable official narrative in ways that are hard to dismiss.
Roswell has survived 79 years of official debunking. A few more inconvenient voices from the desert aren't going to close the case — they're going to reopen it.
Gobble's Take: The Air Force had 79 years to find these tapes and didn't — make of that what you will.
Source: r/UFOs
Russia's Former President Told a Reporter — On Camera — That Aliens Visit Earth and a Secret Service Monitors Them
In 2012, a reporter caught Dmitry Medvedev — then serving as Russia's Prime Minister, having previously held the presidency — just after a televised interview and asked whether Russian leaders receive classified files on extraterrestrials. Medvedev didn't deflect. He stated that along with the briefcase containing nuclear launch codes, every Russian president is handed a special top-secret folder detailing the entire history of alien visits to Earth. Then he went further: a classified special service exists in Russia, he said, dedicated solely to monitoring and controlling extraterrestrials operating within the country. He referenced the film Men in Black as a reasonably accurate depiction.
The clip has circulated in UFO research communities for years, but it keeps resurfacing because no one has ever offered a satisfying explanation for it. Russian officials later suggested Medvedev was joking — but the delivery was unhurried, matter-of-fact, and made to a journalist with a camera running. Researchers who study government UAP disclosure point to the statement as one of the most anomalous on-the-record moments by a sitting head of state, sitting in a category by itself alongside the handful of times U.S. officials have made similarly ambiguous comments before walking them back.
The most unsettling part isn't what Medvedev said — it's how completely unbothered he was saying it.
Gobble's Take: Every government insists there's nothing to see, right up until a former head of state describes the agency watching it.
Source: r/UFOs
17 Earthquakes in 24 Hours Reported Near Area 51
A Reddit post in r/UFOs flagged a Newsweek report claiming 17 earthquakes occurred within 24 hours in an area described as "near Area 51." The post's author linked the activity to UAP disclosure discussions and speculation about secret nuclear testing, while also asking whether the seismic cluster could be completely normal.
Commenters pushed back on the framing quickly. One noted that most of the tremors occurred within the Desert National Wildlife Range, southwest of the town of Alamo — and that media outlets were using "near Area 51" as clickbait. Another commenter cited a submission linking to the Newsweek article, noting geologists confirmed the events as earthquakes. No commenter provided a definitive explanation for the clustering, and several asked for a geologist or seismologist to weigh in.
The post itself reflects the tension between genuine curiosity and pattern-seeking: the author acknowledged anxiety about the headlines and asked for "rational insight," leaving open the possibility of a mundane geological explanation. The source is a Reddit discussion thread, not an independent investigation — and the claims it amplifies come from news coverage that at least one commenter called misleading.
Gobble's Take: When even the people posting about Area 51 earthquakes are asking if it's probably nothing, that's your signal to wait for an actual geologist before connecting any dots.
Source: r/UFOs
In Case You Missed It
Yesterday's top stories:
- A Mars Scientist Is Dead, His Tesla Went the Wrong Way for Two Hours, and Congress Is Asking Why
- Rep. Burchett: Someone Is Sending a Message to Whistleblowers — and It's Working
- Why One Disclosure Advocate Says Huntsville, Alabama Is the UFO Epicenter Nobody Talks About
- The Miami Bayside Incident: A Teen Brawl, Alleged 8-Foot Figures, and Footage Nobody Can Fully Explain
Related reads
Other Gobbles stories on similar themes.
Was this briefing useful?
One tap helps Gobbles learn what to cover more carefully.
Get Are UFOs real in your inbox
Free daily briefing. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
