On Dr. Jerkpatrick’s UFO Conspiracy Theory.

In 2019, I began watching a New York Post YouTube series called “The Basement Office,” which was hosted by Steven Greenstreet, a documentary filmmaker and investigative journalist. In the series, he was nearly always accompanied by Nick Pope, and together they would explore the UFO phenomenon. To my utter surprise, Greenstreet not only seemed to take the subject seriously, but came across as a guy absolutely mind-blown by revelations that there was something to all of this after all; a guy who was busy struggling to integrate these new revelations into his former perspectives. In short, I found that I really enjoyed the show.

Then it seemed to stop. Rather abruptly, too, I might add, and this I found rather disconcerting. Certainly disappointing.

Ultimately, my pessimistic suspicions proved to be correct, for when Greenstreet reappeared on the scene, or at least came to my attention once again, his attitude towards the phenomenon had shifted to the extreme other end of the spectrum. Now he only seemed interested in discrediting the subject at all costs. Then he abruptly fell off my radar once again.

Then, on May 8, 2024, on the New York Post YouTube channel, Greenstreet provides an interview he had with none other than Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick. While it didn’t come to me directly given the YouTube algorithm echochamber, channels that I’d subscribed to highlighted the interview, provided summaries, included their own angles on the subject, and provided links to his original interview. As much as I valued their insights – more or less – it became obvious that I needed to listen to the entire interview, so that’s precisely what my embarrassingly obsessive ass did.

In this interview, the conspiracy theory Kirkpatrick was weaving gained clarity.

You see, “UFO Activists” have successfully infected particular members of Congress with their UFO religion, subsequently leading these Congressional members to form the UAP Caucus. While Kirpatrick couldn’t identify the particular “UFO Activists” in the interview, apparently for legal reasons, Greenstreet proudly proclaims that he had previously identified fifteen of them himself, as he detailed in former videos of his. According to him, these individuals include Kit Green, Hal Putoff, Chris Mellon, George Knapp, Jeremy Corbell, Robert Bigelow, Eric Davis, Lue Elizondo, Jay Stratton, Travis Taylor, Colm Kelleher, James Lacatski, Leslie Kean, Garry Nolan, and David Grusch. He asserts that a number of them have worked together over the decades and the stories of a UFO conspiracy by certain unelected officials against the public all seem to derive from them. These perceptions are echoed in the ARRO Report, which Greenstreet interprets as his vindication.

As for the UAP Caucus, it presently has six official members, according to their website, including Representatives Tim Burchett, Jared Moskowitz, Anna Paulina Luna, Nancy Mace, Eric Burlison, and Andy Ogles. They also list seventeen other members of Congress who have expressed support for their mission.

As Kirkpatrick said in an interview with the National Security Space Association, as supplied by Greestreet’s video, and which apparently occurred March 14, 2024: “I think that is disturbing and should be a flag for the National Security Community, because how can you then trust those people if they are not objective enough to understand evidentiary-based assertions like that? How can you trust them with our national secrets?”

In essence, Kirkpatrick’s conspiracy narrative is this: UFO Activists infected Congress with their UFO religion through the media, which consequently resulted in a threat to national security.

According to Kirkpatrick, at least publicly, it all began on December 16, 2017, when the New York Times published an article, “Glowing Auras and ‘Black Money’: The Pentagon’s Mysterious U.F.O. Program,” which according to Greenstreet contained deliberate falsehoods and deceptions. It was co-written by Leslie Kean, one of those aforementioned activists, and her “sources for the article [were] other activists in the same group,” many of whom the ARRO report notes “were a part of AAWSAP [Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program], a 2008 Pentagon Aerospace technology program that went off the rails when program contractors misappropriated taxpayer funds to hunt UFOs, ghosts, and monsters at Skinwalker Ranch, a supposed paranormal hotspot in Utah. Kirkpatrick says the Pentagon had no idea they were doing this.”

Greenstreet and Kirkpatrick both allege that AATIP, which the aforementioned article brought to light, was never an official Pentagon program and that it was not headed by Lou Elizondo.

Remember this point. It will be referenced in a later post.

Despite this, Greenstreet says, this article spawned widespread interest by the media and Congress. Gasoline was subsequently thrown on the fire when, in early June of 2023, another one of the “UFO Activists,” David Grusch, came on the scene, initially through an article in The Debrief and an edited interview on NewsNation, alleging an ongoing, decades-old secret government program that recovered UFOs and the bodies non-human pilots and was engaging in a cover-up. The following month, on July 26th, there came the historic Congressional hearings, where Ryan Graves, David Fravor, and David Grusch testified. AARO, however, was not invited, as bitterly expressed in Kirpatrick’s LinkedIn post, submitted to the site the day after the hearing, where he writes that “AARO was established, by law, to investigate the allegations and assertions presented in yesterday’s hearing. […] some information reportedly provided to Congress has not been provided to AARO, raising additional questions about the true commitment to transparency by some Congressional elements.”

The disinterest of the Caucus in ARRO was further confirmed when Greenstreet asked Kirkpatrick whether any member of the Caucus asked to be briefed by him. Kirkpatrick said no, with his vibe – at least to me – strongly suggesting that he’s still just as butt-hurt that Congress trusted the whistleblowers over ARRO as he was when he wrote that weird LinkedIn post. While Greenstreet viewed it through his own lens, his follow-up question strongly suggested that he got that general impression, too.

“You come off, in general, as perturbed about a lot of this, if not mildly frustrated,” he said. “Why is that?”

Kirkpatrick responded:

“One of the most frustrating and concerning things that I discovered in this assignment – and I’ve had assignments all over this world, doing a lot of really cool stuff – none of it has given me this level of frustration. Because the thing that we uncovered was that the number of, for the lack of have a better description, ‘true believers,’ that have the faith of conviction that the government is covering this up and hiding it – the number of those people that actually exist within the government, within the National Security space – people that I’ve known for decades and worked with on some very sensitive things – to have them sit in my office and tell me face to face, ‘I’m not going to help you and support you ‘cause I know you’re part of the cover-up,’ even though I’m looking at them, going, ‘I only had this job for like the last week. I don’t know anything about what you’re talking about,’ and then lay out evidence to the contrary for them… for them to ignore all of that and continue to press forward with the allegations is not just frustrating. Because some of them are in positions of authority that then make it difficult to get a job done…”

Greenstreet then provided a clip from a January 23, 2024 interview with Peter Bergen, “In the Room”, in which Kirkpatrick conveyed a similar sentiment. “There is absolutely nothing that I’m going to do, say, or produce evidentiary,” he said, “that is going to make the true believers ‘convert’, if you will. It’s almost like a religion. It is basically religion.”

This butt-hurtness manifested again in the interview, too. In March of 2024, after ARRO released its “Report on the Historical Record of U.S. Government Involvement with Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP), Volume I,” this apparently didn’t impress the Caucus, as within the same month they signed a letter supporting Grusch’s claims. Greenstreet referenced this.

“Even after the ARRO report was released,” Greenstreet began, “some Congressional leaders announced that they will still continue to pursue many of the UFO and alien claims that were dismissed in your report as unfounded. What are your thoughts on that?”

“I think, as I’ve mentioned before, that there are folks that are going to believe what they want to believe,” Kirkpatrick said, “and when they have that level of belief there is no amount of rational thought that you’re going to put in front of them that’s going to change their mind. I think it is a waste of time for them to continue to pursue that. Congress stood up ARRO with all of the authorities and resources necessary to go investigate this on behalf of both Congress and the executive branch, and they have done that job. And for them to continue to pursue that and call them liars is actually telling the men and women of ARRO that have been working on this diligently that they are less credible than anybody else that walks in the door and that they are dismissing their commitment to the Constitution and their duty, and I find that beyond reprehensible.”

Contrary to his assertions that he represents the rational and empirical side of the psychological binary with respect to the UFO issue, here he tries to trigger emotional reactions in Greenstreet and his listeners, a tactic unerringly aimed at inspiring empathy with not only himself, but the ARRO efforts he purports to represent, and by extension seeks to inspire faith in ARRO’s official conclusions. Cherry on top, he’s also calling into question the patriotism of those who question his motives and conclusions.

In essence, Kirkpatrick is trying oh-so-fucking desperately to polarize the issue. He’s not framing the polarization using the currently popular political avenue of Team Red versus Team Blue, either (and if nothing else, I can give him credit for not reaching out for that low-hanging fruit), but something deeper: this, he seems to indicate, is about reason and empiricism versus belief and faith. In other words, it concerns science versus religion.

On one side – the side of which he’s a representative, of course – are the rational, empirical individuals who embrace open-mindedness coupled with healthy skepticism in their approach to the UFO/UAP subject and the associated allegations. They are dedicated to simply collecting the data and following where it leads through a process of investigation and analysis, after which they present it all to the public, entirely devoid of prejudice or ulterior motives.

On the other side, however, reside those naive individuals, many within powerful positions within the US government, who bear passionate convictions, who are possessed by a religious faith that drives them to believe not only that UFOs are alien spacecraft but that elements within our government know this, have recovered such spacecraft, and are lying to the American people about it.

And when he or ARRO provides “evidence” to the contrary, he says, the resulting backlash from the other side, from those that stand with the aforementioned “UFO Activists,” provides evidence of the nature of their emotionally-based position as a whole. He, on the other hand, is not like that, so he maintains. Remember: he’s rational, empirical, simply going where the evidence takes him.

Interestingly, he tries to hammer in this point by citing the hate-mail he has allegedly received as well as those who have threatened him and his family, even one incident where the FBI had to arrest someone on his property – none of which I doubt, and all of which I personally find reprehensible. Even so, bringing this up in this context is clearly done in an effort to elicit sympathy, and to suggest that such an individual accurately represents the “other side” is to paint the other side as irrational and violent, and ultimately reinforces his conspiracy theory.

Consequently, it turns out he is playing on the very same emotional reactions he’s condemning the other side as exhibiting in order to prop up his conspiratorial narrative.

In the end, him trying to brand the position of the so-called “UFO Activists” and UFO/UAP Caucus as being equivalent to Faith and Religion and based only in emotion and brand himself and those he wishes to associate himself with as standing for Reason and Science and all that is rational is utter hogwash.

Many of those Greenstreet refers to as activists were in high positions in our government — positions in which it would make sense that they would know what they claim to know. Assuming they’re truthful, and I assume that those such as Elizondo and Grusch most certainly are, their efforts to push to get the truth out to the public have obviously cost them dearly.

Both Grusch and Elizondo, for instance, torpedoed their careers to try and push for UFO disclosure from outside their former insider positions, and in a legal manner – getting lawyers, going through DOPSR – and it seems abundantly clear that their personal and professional lives have not only taken massive hits as a consequence, but they were intelligent enough to anticipate this. Both have been smeared and lied about multiple times, and in recent days there are even suggestions that the lives of such UFO whistleblowers may be in danger. It’s absurd to interpret their actions as being on behalf of some “UFO religion.”

As for Kirkpatrick himself, as I’ve written previously, there are strong suggestions that he is not being honest with either the public or our elected representatives, constantly straddling the line between being misleading and blatantly lying. Early on, I’d given him the benefit of the doubt and considered me might just be a naive tool, a “useful idiot,” for the Powers That Be, but since the Greenwald revelations, which I’ve covered elsewhere, and in the context of everything I’d previously researched, that naive perception of my own has passed. My working hypothesis is that it’s all deliberate obfuscation and deception.

In addition, while his credentials suggest he’s clearly an intelligent, rational, and empirical individual, he’s also clearly a very emotional one, and often tries to elicit emotions in others to manipulate them into siding with his own stated “empirical” position and “rational” perceptions. His voiced conclusions regarding the UFO phenomenon, the allegations regarding it and those associated with it, and the perhaps not coincidentally similar official conclusions of ARRO, are clearly not rational.

Kirkpatrick’s conspiracy theory is bunk. The guy is a liar and an asshole, and as someone on Reddit who I wish I could credit ingeniously suggested some time ago, one might more accurately refer to him as Jerkpatrick.

The Greenwald Revelations: Drama, Distraction, & UFO Conspiracy.

“When will this be over,
this cold and bitter season?
The government is lying.
The truth is found with reason.”
– Box Car Racer, “All Systems Go.”

“The key element of social control is the strategy of distraction that is to divert public attention from important issues and changes decided by political and economic elites, through the technique of flood or flooding continuous distractions and insignificant information.”
― attributed to Noam Chomsky.

Despite my resistance, into this insipid drama I descend, if only in an effort to sort it out. As I do so, however, please tread forward pained with the knowledge that I absolutely fucking hate myself.

In my September 14, 2023 post with an admittedly convoluted title, “UFOs, Congress, and the Pentagon (Kirkpatrick VS Grusch, Enter: Hicks)”, I detailed to the best of my knowledge and ability the drama that had unfolded between UFO whistleblower David Grusch and Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick, who was at the time the Director of the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO). However much I would like to be allergic to such drama, I am human, after all, and in addition, I shamelessly confess that I feel particularly drawn to such drama when it’s inextricably associated with an alleged century-long global conspiracy that, if ultimately disclosed, could entirely upend what our civilization regards as conventional reality. So please excuse that over-half-a-year-old post as well as this one, which serves as a follow-up, for recently more has come to light regarding this drama. As before, I intend to sort through it the best I can.

Before doing so, however, I must introduce another character: Mr. John Greenwald, Jr.

I. John Greenwald, Ken Klippenstein, FOIA, & Signal.

In 1996, when he was fifteen, John Greenwald began submitting Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests for documents relating to UFOs and other interesting subjects. Believing that there should be an online repository for such received government documents, he gave birth to his website, The Black Vault, containing over millions pages of FOIA material. Later, he began a podcast, started writing articles and books, started appearing on television and selling T-shirts, and became a producer and writer for television series regarding UFOs. He has also engaged in non-related pursuits, and still considers The Black Vault a hobby.

Since Grusch came on the scene in early June 2023, Greenwald has made abundantly clear his suspicions regarding him. At least from what I’ve gathered until recently, this primarily stemmed from his interpretation of DOPSR, though it may go beyond that, as I do not frequently view his YouTube channel. On April 18, 2024, it became clear that his distrust of Grusch extended beyond that, however, as that was when Greenewald published an article entitled, “FOIA Documents Reveal AARO’s Authorized and Repeated Attempts to Engage with David Grusch.” As implied by the title, according to Greenewald, this article documents the fact that ARRO, while headed by Kirkpatrick, “made numerous attempts to interview UFO whistleblower David Grusch regarding his claims of U.S. Government engagement with extraterrestrial materials and technologies.”

The documents released to The Black Vault and included in Greenwald’s article included not only a January 8, 2024, Memorandum – that, yes, some suspect was written by Kirkpatrick, though there is no conclusive evidence of this – but also screenshots of relevant Signal text messages and emails. Greenwald also includes his summary of the documented events along with his article.

There is some suspicion with respect to how quickly his FOIA request was responded to, however, as well as what he specifically received.

In Shaun Raviv’s May 6, 2020 article on John Greenwald, “Inside the Black Vault: A FOIA obsessive’s UFO-filled empire,” he probed an interesting question: how long did it typically take a FOIA request to bear fruit? Back in the 90s, Greenwald said, it really wasn’t all that bad:

“Back then, the turnaround time for a request was far quicker than it is now. ‘It’s really night and day,’ he told me recently. It averaged, by Greenewald’s estimate, a couple of months before he heard an answer; today the wait is often measured in years. […] In one case, documents he requested took thirteen years to arrive. That was fine. His patience, he believes, is a large part of what makes the Black Vault valuable.”

This is admirable, broadly-speaking.

In this particular case, however, I find it incredibly interesting, as Greenwald filed this FOIA case (24-F-0266) on November 2, 2023, as previously mentioned, and received it recently, he said in his article, which would be April 2024. In other words, it took roughly half a year. From what can be gathered from the above quote and in many other FOIA cases filed by others, this seems to be a rather prompt response, relatively-speaking. As a matter of fact, it’s suspiciously akin to the unnaturally swift response journalist Ken Klippenstein received with respect to his FOIA request involving Grusch.

According to Klippenstein, in response to Grusch’s Congressional testimony four days previously, he allegedly spoke with his contacts in the DOD and IC. As I wrote in my August 20, 2023 post, “On the Smear Campaign Against David Grusch,” he then apparently “spread a net to receive tips outside his comfort zone, and ultimately received a ‘mosaic’ of general suggestions as to where he should look to substantiate their claims.” At the direction of the suggestions received, he made his FOIA request on July 30, 2023, which was received and responded to by August 1, at which point he was told “it was being forwarded to the Leesburg Police Department in Virginia.” Klippenstein’s article in The Intercept was published nine days later, on August 10.

Given that Klippenstein’s father works for the DOD, I naturally find it relatively easy to believe that he might have been smearing Grusch on behalf of his contacts in the DOD and IC. Greenwald? I’m far less inclined to take that bold and entirely unjustified leap. I think Greenwald provides an invaluable service to not only the UFO community, but towards the efforts of government transparency in general. Particularly in an era in which the mainstream media is failing as what I once felt was its role, which was to serve as the unofficial fourth branch of government composed of watchdogs for the citizenry with respect to the Powers That Be, we desperately need guys like him.

In light of his previous suspicions regarding Grusch, which he was not shy about, and his subsequent FOIA request, however, I think he may have been perceived and subsequently used by The Powers That Be in this particular instance as convenient conduit for data and could be reasonably confident how it would be slanted by him. Given his previous public perceptions, they knew how he would interpret this data and they knew it would serve their agenda, which is to throw shade on Grusch – much like Klippenstein’s article in The Intercept. They assumed the public would focus on Greenwald’s summary, which was hardly an elaboration on the Memorandum, which was a misleading summary of the provided text messages and emails, in my opinion. That said, I’m sure I have my biases as well.

It wasn’t just how relatively swift his FOIA request received a response, either, as I formerly suggested, but how much he received as a result of his request. Even Greenwald said – in his own YouTube breakdown and during his discussion about it with Patrick on the Vetted podcast on April 19 – that he was surprised at the material he got.

Specifically, the aforementioned documents in question provided five screenshots of Signal text messages between Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick, head of ARRO at the time, and Chris Mellon, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and current UFO disclosure advocate. The provided text exchange occurs for the most part through June 12-13, followed by a brief text exchange that took place at some undetermined date after the original texts. In his later YouTube breakdown, Greenwald said he has issued FOIA requests for the earlier texts (suggested by a “Thank you” from Mellon at the top of the first screenshot, dated June 11) as well as one rather large text by Mellon which was cut off due to length.

He wasn’t the only one surprised by the Signal text exchange being provided. So was Mellon. My impression of him, which I will get to shortly, was only reinforced when I later learned of his tweet on X, which he posted on April 18, the same day Greenwald published his article:

“To my surprise, parts of a conversation I had with Dr. Kirkpatrick on Signal were recently made public via a FOIA request. These messages simply relate to my effort to facilitate a meeting between AARO and Dave Grusch at Dr. Kirkpatrick’s request. I don’t give out people’s contact info without their consent, but I told Sean I would be happy to convey his request to Dave. My recollection is that Dave was going to consult his attorney and proceed from there. Dave has an excellent attorney, so if he was advised by counsel not to meet with AARO or others I certainly don’t blame him. I was not in a position to judge the legal arguments and issues involving conflicting IC IG, DOJ, and AARO jurisdiction and claims, I was simply trying to facilitate communications in the hope of helping the Congressionally mandated investigation.”

We can also add Lou Elizondo to the community of the wide-eyed, as his response to Mellon’s tweet the same day conveys:

“Chris, I wonder when did DoD authorize Kirkpatrick to use the Signal app for official U.S. business and correspondence? You and I would have been crucified for doing that while we were in the Government. And when did they allow personal identifiable info of U.S. citizens to be released contrary to [the] Privacy Act of 1974? I guess [it’s] more of the same regarding rules that apply ‘to thee, but not to me.’”

According to what Greenwald said in his interview on the Vetted podcast, hosted by Patrick Scott Armstrong, any emails or text messages with a government official are potentially accessible through FOIA. Even so, he reiterated that he “was surprised to see that method of communication” and was uncertain as to whether it was the preference of Kirpatrick or Mellon. He obviously wasn’t aware of the tweets of Mellon or Elizondo at the time. If it was due to anyone’s preference, Kirkpatrick must be the one.

Now, if you’re as ignorant as I was, you might be wondering just what the hell “Signal” is. As I’ve learned, it’s an app that allows end-to-end encrypted communications, which means that only the intended target can receive them. The Signal app apparently also has a feature where you can set it to entirely wipe out (for instance) your text messages after one week. As the final screenshot of text messages reveals, the user had this setting, as between the 12-13 communications and the subsequent brief exchange formerly mentioned the app reminded the user: “You set disappearing message time to 1 week.” The user, as we’ve discerned, was evidently Kirkpatrick. So far as I’m aware, this only implies that it was at that point in his conversation with Mellon that Kirkpatrick implemented that setting, from which we can infer that he felt he had no reason to do so beforehand.

In any case, why would he take screenshots of this conversation at any point? After all, it seems to contradict the very point of the Signal App. Does he perhaps possess some degree of precognitive ability, and this is what inspired him to trap these text messages in photographic amber, as he anticipated they might serve some use in the future?

Maybe I’m missing something here. If I am, please enlighten me in the comments. As for now, this remains incredibly suspicious to me.

II. Mellon in the Middle.

According to Greenewald’s summary, between June 8-13 2023 – which is to say starting just three days after the airing of Coulthart’s NewsNation interview with Grusch and the article in The Debrief was published – the documents provided revealed that “[i]initial contact was made with known associates of Grusch, urging them to have him speak with AARO. These efforts were clarified during dialogues between AARO’s Director and individuals close to Grusch.” The memorandum, it read as follows: “Between June 8th, 2023 and June 13th, 2023, Director, AARO engaged in a dialog with [REDACTED] regarding AARO’s authorities and encouraged [REDACTED] to have Mr. Grusch contact AARO. Note that [REDACTED] is a known close associate of Mr. Grusch and the dialog made it clear that [REDACTED] was in contact with Mr. Grusch.”

As stated earlier, these email communications through the Signal app occurred through Kirkpatrick and Mellon, who is obviously the “REDACTED” referred to above.

As far as my general impression of the conversation itself, Mellon seems very cordial, polite, professional, and fair, whereas Kirkpatrick comes off as an aggressive asshole with a superiority complex. Despite his attempts to project the image of someone who is intimidating and – however intelligent and educated he may be – far more intelligent and educated than he actually is, he fails at every turn.

In any case, in the Signal text conversation, Kirkpatrick says:

“Grusch has made claims that he’s contacted us and we’ve never responded. That’s just not true. He’s also made claims that we don’t have access to investigate his claims. That’s also not true. If I recall correctly you indicated he refused to come talk with us, and you’re quoted as suggesting as such. I’d suggest you emphasize the need to come speak with us. You have the contact email.”

To this, Mellon expresses his confusion:

“Do you have a specific example of Dave claiming he’s contacted AARO and your office refused to respond? That sounds strange as during a conversation yesterday he told me AARO was not a [lawfully] designated recipient of his [whistleblower] info, hence his reason for not contacting AARO. I also do not recall saying Dave refused to come talk to AARO, I certainly did not do so in the Debrief article or my article in Politico and I’ve done no interviews yet about Dave.”

Kirkpatrick then says Grusch made those claims during the June 5 Coulthart interview. Mellon’s confusion was therefore understandable, as Kirkpatrick was either misunderstanding or purposely misrepresenting what Grusch actually said.

During the June 5, 2023 interview with Coulthart, Grusch claimed to have known Kirkpatrick for eight years. In April of 2022, prior to Kirkpatrick becoming the director of ARRO that July, Grusch said he’d had a classified conversation with him dealing with the concerns he had resulting from his discoveries while working at the NGA as the “agency’s co-lead in Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) and trans-medium object analysis,” as he put it in his July 27, 2023, Congressional testimony, which entailed him “reporting to UAP Task Force (UAPTF) and eventually the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).” According to Grusch, however, Kirkpatrick had failed to follow up with him since that conversation, at least as of July 27, 2023.

Grusch mentioned this conversation he had with Kirkpatrick at least twice directly, and would again do so indirectly. The first occurred during the aforementioned June 5, 2023 NewsNation interview.

“I told him what I was starting to uncover and he didn’t follow up with me,” he said. “He has my phone number. He could’ve called me. I hope he ultimately does the right thing. He should be able to make the same investigative discoveries I did.”

Then there was the Congressional hearing held at the end of the following month. When asked if he knew why Kirkpatrick had failed to follow up with him, Grusch seemed reluctant to assume any motivations.

“Unfortunately, I cannot read his mind,” he responded. “I wish he did. I was happy to give sage counsel to him on where to look when he took the helm of AARO.”

In other words, Grusch never claimed that he contacted ARRO and that they failed to respond, but rather that he had a personal and classified conversation with Kirkpatrick in April of 2022, three months before he became ARRO’s director on July 20, and that, despite having his phone number, Kirkpatrick never got back to him.

The third time it was referenced by Grusch, it was done so indirectly, with Mellon serving as the intermediary, as revealed in those same released text conversations between Mellon and Kirkpatrick. Mellon told Kirkpatrick that Grusch’s “claim about contacting you dates to a conversation the two of you had many months ago on a ‘Tandberg* (sp?) system and that you didn’t follow up after that call. I’m not trying to adjudicate that issue[,] just telling you what he said. Apparently that is what his statement was referring to.”

My immediate curiosity was what a “Tandberg system” was, so I did some Googling. According to John Gans’s May 13, 2019 Wired article, “How Tech Helped Unknown Staffers Change the US Way of War”:

“The Tanderberg Video-Teleconference monitor is sleeker than the average desktop computer but not much bigger. Developed by a Norwegian concern now owned by Cisco Systems, the desktop units — which look like knock-off iMacs, with a handset for dialing — support seamless and, when enabled, classified video-teleconferencing. Although businesses are the predominant market for the machines, they have become almost as common as the US flag in government offices around Washington, at embassies, and in war zones.”

So the alleged April 2022 classified conversation took place on a classified video-conferencing call. One might hope that the confusion would now be cleared up now that Kirkpatrick was informed that Grusch wasn’t talking about ARRO but about Kirpatrick himself. Not so. Actually, this almost seems to make things worse, as Kirkpatrick flat-out denies this conversation ever took place.

“All of that is both absurd and false,” he texts. “I [haven’t] had a conversation with him for years.”

He didn’t let up, either. Over four months later, Kirkpatrick continued to deny this conversation took place, this time in public – though in this case, in a strangely less forceful way. This is revealed on the DOD’s website, where there is a transcript entitled, “AARO Director Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick Holds an Off-Camera Media Roundtable” dated October 31, 2023, where Kirkpatrick was asked about Grusch directly:

“Q: And so, he also says that he briefed you before you assumed your position in AARO. Have you had the chance to follow up on any of the inquiries that he made or talked to any of the witnesses?

DR. KIRKPATRICK: So, the last time I believe I spoke with Mr. Grusch was when I was in the J2 at U.S. Space Command about five years ago [2018], and it was not on this topic. Now, we have interviewed a whole range of people, over 30 people now. I think we’ve interviewed most of the people that he may have talked to, but we don’t know that. And we have extended an invitation at least four or five times now for him to come in over the last eight months or so and has been declined.”

Two interesting things in what Kirkpatrick said here.

First, as previously stated, he seems to deny the classified conversation Grusch claims they had in April 2022, and in this case he does so in a suspiciously indirect, wishy-washy, and semi-dodgy manner, at least it seems that way to me. Having initially given him the benefit of the doubt, I considered at first that perhaps Kirkpatrick could neither confirm nor deny this conversation legally given its classified status. I quickly found it difficult to swallow this, however. After all, given Grusch’s strict adherence to law and official procedure and the fact that he nonetheless referenced this classified conversation without providing details, it seems reasonable to assume that Kirkpatrick could’ve easily done the same. Then there came the text conversations in Greenwald’s FOIA documents, however, where Kirkpatrick flatly denied that it had taken place. Why deny it so aggressively in what, at the time, he must have presumed to be a private conversation (though, granted, he did screenshot the conversation… ) and then deny it in such a distinctly different and suspiciously qualified statement on public record?

Unless it’s clarified by Grusch or Kirkpatrick, or further materials are declassified and released through FOIA, I suppose this element will remain frustratingly ambiguous.

Now let’s delve into the second claim, which involves Kirkpatrick’s insistence that ARRO has repeatedly “extended an invitation” to Grusch for him to come talk to them and all invitations have been declined. In response to this allegation, Grusch reportedly texted NewsNation’s Brian Entin on November 2, stating in no uncertain terms:

“I have received zero emails or calls from them. That is a lie.”

It should be noted that what Grusch said here is technically true. While ARRO kept urging people surrounding and connected with Grusch to have him contact them, AARO never contacted him directly, at least insofar as the released documents specifically reveal. One should also bear in mind that Grusch’s comment was the only quoted portion of the text conversation between Entin and Grusch. The full text Grusch sent was not provided, nor any text Entin himself might have sent to Grusch, and the precise nature of how the question was worded might add some clarity.

III. Grusch’s Concerns Regarding AARO.

To get back to the June 11-13 text conversation between Mellon and Kirpatrick that Greenwald provided in his article, however, Kirkpatrick’s general vibe seems unmistakable to me. It’s familiar as well. On July 27, 2023 – two weeks after the temporal scope of this text conversation (aside from the short, undated ones at the end, of course) and a mere day after Grusch provided testimony to Congress – Kirkpatrick posted “Hearings and Transparency,” a public LinkedIn post that carried the same emotional atmosphere, though unlike these formerly private texts, clearly checked for spelling and grammatical errors. There, as here, he seems incredibly butt-hurt and frustrated, and the source of this seems to be the reluctance of Grusch to reach out to ARRO. The discussion between Mellon and himself in the texts seems to clearly indicate the concerns that reside at the heart of Grusch’s reluctance to do so as well.

One of Grusch’s concerns was referenced by Kirkpatrick, actually. At one point, previously quoted, he says that Grusch has “made claims that we don’t have access to investigate his claims” and that this was “not true.” To this, Mellon responded that he thought that sounded strange, as during a conversation with Grusch he’d apparently had the previous day he suggested that “AARO was not a [lawfully] designated recipient of his [whistleblower] info, hence his reason for not contacting AARO.” Kirkpatrick returned by insisting that Grusch’s “assertion that we aren’t lawfully empowered is clearly incongruous with the law.”

Is it, though?

During the April 19 Senate Armed Services Subcommittee Hearing on Emerging Threats and Capabilities, Senator Jacky Rose asked him if he needed any authorities he didn’t have access to in order to do his job, and before she could even finish, Kirkpatrick blurted out:

“There are some authorities that we need. We are currently operating under Title 10 authorities, but we have good relationships across the other agencies. But having additional authorities for collection, tasking, counter-intelligence – those are all things that would be helpful, yes.”

According to “Case Not Closed: DoD To Review 2019 West Coast UFOs Which Harassed US Warships,” a May 2023 Liberation Times article written by Christopher Sharp: “This means that he can access information from DoD and military operations,” but not access data from the intelligence community (IC), more specifically “from intelligence agencies, intelligence activities, and covert action.” For this, Kirkpatrick and ARRO would require Title 50 authorities, allowing them to access and verify the existence of the programs the whistleblowers that had confided in Grusch were involved in. Without Title 50 authorities, ARRO cannot verify any whistleblower claims, even if they wanted to.

It doesn’t stop there, however. At least according to Matt Ford of The Good Trouble Show – an excellent and dreadfully underrated channel on YouTube, I might add – ARRO and its agents do not have 1811 authority, either, which is to say that while they could at least receive (presumably through their Title 10 authority) certain classified information, they weren’t Special Agents, and consequently “could not conduct search and seizure, they couldn’t make arrests, they couldn’t depose people, they couldn’t subpoena anyone.” Granted, this wasn’t mentioned in the text exchange, nor has it ever been mentioned by Grusch himself, but I find it difficult to believe that, if accurate, Grusch and his attorney wouldn’t be well aware of it.

If indeed ARRO only had Title 10 Authority and neither Title 50 or 1811 authorities, anyone who provided testimony to them regarding necessarily compartmentalized and illicit programs would never have a hope in hell of having those allegations being properly investigated, let alone legally “confirmed” or “verified”. On the contrary, upon receiving this classified data, all ARRO could legally do would be to call up the alleged authorities and politely ask them:

“Hey, do you have any illicit, compartmentalized programs that deal with the collection and back-engineering of recovered craft from Non-Human Intelligences and the acquisition and study of the bodies of their occupants? While we’re at it, do you also have any illicit, compartmentalized programs dealing with a broad cover-up and disinformation campaign against your very own citizens, which might have involved intimidating, discrediting, even murdering individuals who knew too much and/or were threatening to reveal your broad swath of illegal and deeply unethical activities? No? Are you sure? You are? Okey-Dokey artichokie.”

In short, ARRO was utterly impotent, and should we be surprised? ARRO is an office within the Pentagon, which it was in part tasked with investigating, which essentially amounts to demanding the fox guard the hen house. And the guy originally put in charge of this five-sided-body’s feeble appendage was a man that I honestly, originally suspected might just be a useful idiot but now confidently perceive to be a narcissist who knew he could ultimately get what he wanted if only he played the game and served his masters well. It is no wonder that, as Coulthart and others have expressed, many whistleblowers within the overarching Program that Grusch exposed didn’t feel comfortable coming to ARRO and confessing all, but instead went straight to Congress and the Office of the Inspector General.

This is not the only reason suggested in these texts that Grusch was reluctant to reach out to ARRO, however, as Mellon’s response to Kirkpatrick revealed.

In the Signal texts, Mellon conveyed to Kirkpatrick that he had spoken to Grusch and that his first question had been why ARRO has not simply gotten the relevant data from the Intelligence Community Inspector General (ICIG), where it was all “[fully] documented to include confirmation the program is real from active, cleared insiders.”

K: “DOJ has to release it since it’s part of a criminal investigation. They haven’t yet. He needs to come tell us separate from his criminal complaint.”

M: “He obviously doesn’t have to do so and he even said “How do I know Sean is not a target of the ongoing criminal investigation[!]”

And there we have the second potential reason why Grusch was reluctant to reach out to ARRO: that Kirkpatrick specifically, and not merely ARRO in general, may be the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation. I again refer to my September 14, 2023 post, UFOs, Congress, and the Pentagon (Kirpatrick Vs Grush, Enter: Hicks), where I wrote the following:

“Let’s assume that Grusch had indeed briefed Kirkpatrick in April 2022 on what he’d gathered regarding The Program but that Kirkpatrick had failed to follow up with him. This would have certainly communicated to Grusch that Kirkpatrick either wasn’t taking the allegations seriously, or worse, that he knew these allegations were serious and was intentionally not following up on them — for reasons unknown.

If that were the case, and the reprisals Grusch spoke of happened afterward, why would he bother briefing Kirkpatrick a second time? If we instead assume that the [reprisals] had happened before April 2022 and Grusch had indeed told Kirkpatrick about the issue during the briefing and Kirkpatrick had failed to follow up, his concerns would understandably be even greater than in the first scenario.

Yet Kirkpatrick also said in his LinkedIn letter that “the central source of those allegations has refused to speak with AARO,” which suggests that either Kirkpatrick or ARRO representatives have since reached out to Grusch – he doesn’t suggest when, but let’s assume for the moment that it was after Grusch went public in early June when he first spoke on how Kirkpatrick hadn’t followed up – and that Grusch has since refused to respond.

Well, I apply the same logic here as before: Why would Grusch be willing to have a conversation with him now, after he had been ignored for so long and Kirkpatrick suddenly had interest in following up after the public heat had been turned up? It’s also possible, and I’d go so far as to say probable, that Grusch’s lawyer – Charles McCullough III, senior partner of the Compass Rose Legal Group in Washington and the first ever Inspector General of the Intelligence Community (IGIC) – had at this point advised him not to speak with Kirkpatrick.

He’d had his chance, after all, and now higher authorities were taking over the job he refused to do, and any further communications with Kirkpatrick might hinder the investigation.

Again, this is all assumption – I’d certainly like to think it is to some degree educated assumption, but it is an assumption nonetheless. Until more information is made publicly available on this circumstance, this is unfortunately what we’re left with.”

Well, we’ve got more now.

Accepting all that Grusch has conveyed directly and indirectly up to this point as true, or at least true from his perspective, we can surmise that his reluctance to reach out to, much less provide testimony to ARRO, comes down to at least four central concerns, some but not all of which have been covered above.

First, Grusch was not convinced that ARRO had the authorities necessary to hear, let alone properly investigate and verify, his testimony.

Second, even if ARRO were cleared to hear about and even investigate the information about UFO programs regardless as to their classification per se, there may be a loophole Grusch was concerned about, though he never stated it overly, at least to my knowledge. In any case, two journalists, Ross Coulthart (with whom Grusch has clearly been in close communication with both prior to and following the interview) and Micheal Shellenberger – both of whom have spoken with UFO whistleblowers, at least some of whom we can reasonably assume were the same ones who had spoken with Grusch – have mentioned how those whistleblowers tend not to trust ARRO as far as they could throw them. While neither journalist ever expressed specifically why, I suspect it comes down to the aforementioned “fox in the hen house” analogy, and seems to echo a suspicion some in the UFO communities on Reddit have developed. The general hypothesis posits that ARRO serves as the Pentagon’s “honeypot” and “legal trap.” They draw in UFO whistleblowers, make them feel comfortable in divulging classified information regarding UFO programs, and in the process goad them into briefing them about associated but ultimately non-related classified programs that may be necessary to provide context or confirm their allegations. This, as a consequence, could make those whistleblowers legally liable and enable the Gatekeepers to silence them for violating the law.

Even if he didn’t know for certain this was true, Grusch, having been the recipient of over 30 whistleblower claims in the course of his investigations while working for the government, would no doubt be well aware of this suspicion among them, and given what he had to reveal dealt with those accounts, would have been understandably concerned that by talking to ARRO he might also be falling into a trap. This trap would not only lead him to fucking himself, either, but the dozens of others who had confided in him, and were counting on him.

Third, he suspected that Kirkpatrick himself may be the subject of a criminal investigation, perhaps the one relating to his reprisals, and that providing him testimony may compromise that investigation.

The fourth concern requires that we keep in mind the far grander and more personal context here, namely the history between Kirkpatrick and Grusch. Consider that Kirkpatrick and Grusch knew one another for eight years, as Grusch attested, and they did indeed have that classified conversation via a Tanderberg Video-Teleconference call in April of 2022, before Kirkpatrick became the director of ARRO, during which Grusch provided the suspicions he’d developed in the course of his investigations. And despite the fact that Kirpatrick had his personal phone number, he failed to follow up with him – until, suspiciously, just three days after the groundbreaking June 5th, 2023 interview with Coulthart, where Grusch publicly spilled all beans DOPSR would allow regarding those classified concerns. And even then, Kirkpatrick didn’t follow up with him personally, but through an associate, and via text. And not personally, not really, the texts suggest, but as the head of ARRO. And to top it all off, Kirkpatrick flatly denied that the classified April 2022 conversation had ever happened at all.

If anyone of reasonable intelligence were in Grusch’s shoes, I feel confident that they would be incredibly suspicious of the whole situation, especially after having already experienced reprisals, particularly if the suspicion was that those reprisals seemed to have stemmed from (and I’m making an entirely unfounded assumption here, mind you) the concerns formerly conveyed to Kirkpatrick.

I mean, there is paranoia, yes, but there is also reasonable concern. In Grusch’s shoes, within the context of what I would imagine his personal experience must have been at that point – especially after having already experienced reprisals, as I said – I would imagine his noting of the fact that Kirkpatrick was intent on taking this indirect avenue of “reaching out to him” despite knowing how to contact him personally would raise alarm bells — nay, vibrant, neon-blazing, blood-red flags in his mind.

Despite all this, however, Grusch ultimately did reach out to ARRO. He sent them an email in November of 2024.

IV. Did Grusch Stand ARRO Up?

Again, from the Memorandum:

“On November 10th, 2023, Mr. Grusch contacted AARO, at the urging of Congressional Staff Members, and agreed to be interviewed in Arlington, VA on November 14th, 2024 [2023, of course — it seems clear this is a typo]. AARO provided Mr. Grusch with a memorandum from the Director of Special Access Programs, Department of Defense that made it clear AARO is authorized to receive compartmented information (Enclosure 1). Mr. Grusch was also told that AARO would obtain a similar memorandum from the Director, Controlled Access Programs Office, Office of the Director of National Intelligence.”

Then Grusch allegedly stood them up, as the next item on the Memorandum documented.

“On November 14th, 2023, Mr. Grusch failed to show at the agreed upon location and time for an interview with AARO. Upon contacting Mr. Grusch, he stated that he is not convinced that AARO is authorized to receive varying levels of classified and sensitive information.”

At 10:34 in the morning, some half an hour after what was apparently the agreed-upon time of the meeting, an anonymous personal emails Grusch to ask:

“I’ve been waiting in the lobby over 30 minutes. Are you showing up?”

On the Vetted podcast, Armstrong and Greenwald both actually cut Grusch some slack in this case, too, it should be noted. As Armstrong says:

“It seemed like some miscommunication and misunderstanding, and to be fair to Grush, Grush did apologize for not showing up to that meeting. I do want to make sure that I read that as well. He did say thank you or I apologize for the confusion this morning about my whereabouts, I should have been more clear in my email on Monday. Because again, from what I could tell that’s what was holding up. He felt like, yes, I agreed to come in at 10 am on this date, but I asked some questions and in his mind those questions didn’t get answered so, therefore that’s why he didn’t show up to that meeting.”

To this, Greenwald responds:

“I think you’re absolutely right. I made sure that his apology was in the article and I made reference to that. I believe, just from a professional courtesy standpoint, I’m glad that he did that. I’m a little surprised though that it went so far as to it being scheduled. Something like this just isn’t, you know, a lunch date between buddies, but rather something pretty important, and it went right down to the wire, where these guys are are are sitting in the lobby for thirty minutes. So I’m kind of surprised at that.”

In his YouTube breakdown on the documents, Greenwald also provides commentary on this incident, justifying his continuing suspicion regarding Grusch’s integrity on its basis:

“If he didn’t set up the meeting and didn’t show, I can understand his concern was really the root cause of that, but how is it that he could go all that way, set up the meeting, the time, and just not show? What happened? Was it under advice of counsel? Maybe, but why wouldn’t he have that advice prior? We know who his attorney is. Charles McCullough, the former ICIG. So clearly he has got an incredibly intelligent attorney behind him. So if it was based on legal counsel, why didn’t he get that counsel prior? Because he was clearly proactively – after declining a bunch of invitations, it seems proactively – now reaching out to AARO and saying, ‘Hey, let’s chat.’”

Before I could finish writing this post, Grusch re-emerged from his months-long radio silence on May 3, 2024 to provide some clarification that confirmed many of my suspicions:

“AARO officially made contact with me in November 2023 as indicated by the email chain in the FOIA release. Prior to this, neither my attorney nor myself had been officially contacted in any way by AARO. To date, my 8 January 2024 email to AARO requesting them to answer my security-related concerns I sent to them via email on 13 November 2023 has gone unanswered. The DoD SAPCO and DNI CAPCO memorandums do not address the variety of serious procedural issues I voiced in November 2023 as it relates to non-UAP related compartmented programs, as well as National Security Council SAPs and CIA Directorate of Operations human intelligence programs. Protecting classified information is a lifelong obligation. To be clear, AARO does not have access to the information I provided to the Intelligence Community Inspector General (ICIG) and the Congressional Intelligence Committees under the PPD-19 whistleblowing process. I trust in the investigative and law enforcement/criminal referral authorities ICIG has independent of DoD oversight.”

V. Conclusions.

David Grusch is a patriot. Despite having found evidence that an aspect of the US Government has gone rogue and has been engaging in incredibly illicit activities for decades, he seems to perceive this as at best an anomaly, at worst a cancer, and still finds value in this system if the lies and their crimes were properly investigated and exposed to the public in a slow, controlled manner.

I, on the other hand? I am not a patriot. While our system as it presently stands may be better than most if not all others in a relative sense, it desperately requires evolution. Even so, from the very first day I began looking into Grusch, I couldn’t help but respect the guy – and that respect has only been reinforced every step of the way.

His psychology naturally gravitates him towards serving a group, being part of a family, and fighting on behalf of that tribe. And early on, in his eyes, that family was his country, the ol’ US of A. For foreigners, as I’ve gathered, it’s known as The States. In service to his elected family, he has brought all he has in his psychological arsenal to bear, which includes his autism, his clearly high intelligence, his sense of integrity, and his unwavering knowledge of and commitment to following the letter of the law with all its elaborate nuances and intricacies. His military and civilian careers provide testament to this, as does his broad clearances – as does his ultimate choice to retire early to become a whistleblower.

As previously mentioned, while performing his duties he amassed sufficient evidence that a sector of the US government had gone rogue. Not only were they breaking the law in general, they had been dodging proper Congressional oversight, and he felt it his responsibility – damned be the personal cost – to inform the proper authorities, including inspector generals and the Congress, and after running what he wished to convey through DOPSR, bring this knowledge to the public so far as he could through legal means, and rally a crowd to rectify this illicit and immoral travesty.

In tandem with this, I’ve increasingly come to suspect there was an impulse to expand not only his sense of family to the whole of humanity, but to expand the whole of humanity’s sense of family to itself – to a species-wide global consciousness. After all, what he had discovered in his duties suggested that we were not alone as an intelligent, technological, planetary species, and that rogue sectors within world governments knew damn well that this was the case, and that if publicly known this knowledge might inspire cohesion amongst increasingly polarized human tribes, and tribes within tribes, in the light of a more cosmic perspective.

If what he desires to disclose proves to be the truth – and it should be clear that I, for one, am pretty much sold at this point – and he helps to generate its ultimate disclosure, I feel certain he wouldn’t want to be seen as a hero. And I get that perspective. But if he isn’t ultimately recognized as a key figure in shaping not only the history of our country but of human history, we have done our descendants a great disservice.

Not as great a disservice as we would do them if we were to continue to allow the Powers That Be – a small number of arrogant, power-hungry, unethical tyrants within the US Government, and likely other governments throughout the globe – to continue propagating the greatest of deceptions and the most heinous of crimes, however.

ARRO is just another tool for them to brainwash us all, Just like the disinformation campaign Robertson Panel recommended, just like Project Bluebook ended up, undoubtedly aiming for the former success of the Condon Report, they want to continue to cover up, misinform, disinform, and as I think this case demonstrates, fucking distract the populace with respect to the truth – and demoralize, stigmatize, bribe, and, if necessary, eliminate those who fight to bring it to light, all to convince the populace:

“There’s nothing to see here, folks.”

Bullshit. There is so, so much more to see here…

UFOs, Aliens, and Government Secrecy: Of Controlled or Catastrophic Disclosure.

“We dance round in a ring and suppose,
But the Secret sits in the middle and knows.”
– Robert Frost, The Secret Sits.

“With a secret like that, at some point the secret itself becomes irrelevant. The fact that you kept it does not.”
– Sara Gruen, Water for Elephants.

The Sol Foundation is a California-based nonprofit organization that was established on August 15th of this year. On its website, the Foundation is described as “a new think tank that has been established to research the philosophical, policy, and scientific implications of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP)” and aims “to be a leading source of research on the issue, while providing the most informed and insightful policy recommendations to governments. The Foundation will encourage greater government transparency, drive collaborative sharing and review of academic insight, and champion methodical, scientifically robust assessment and analysis.”

The two co-founders are Dr. Garry Nolan, a Professor at the Department of Pathology at Stanford University School of Medicine, who also serves as the Executive Director, and Dr. Peter Skafish, a sociocultural anthropologist who also serves as the Director of Research. At present (which is to say towards the end of December 2023), the other board members include Timothy Gallaudet (Natural Sciences Advisory Board, US Government Advisory Board), Dr. Diana Walsh Pasulka (Social Sciences Advisory Board), Avi Loeb (Natural Sciences Advisory Board), and Jonathan Berte (Board of Directors, European Union and Technology and Investment Advisory Boards).

The Foundation’s first, invite-only conference occurred at Stanford University – and sponsored by their School of Medicine, largely due to Nolan’s efforts – between November 17 and 18 of this year. Here select reporters, activists, former government officials, physicists, other academic researchers, and evidently, even abductees or “experiencers” such as Whitley Strieber were in attendance. The speakers included former intel officer and UFO whistleblower David Grush, Belgian AI entrepreneur Jonathan Berte, former Secretary of Defense for Intelligence Chris Mellon, retired US Army Colonel Karl E. Nell, former Inspector General of the Intelligence Community Charles McCullough III, and Dr. Hal Puthoff.

At the conference, Puthoff revealed that in 2004, in Washington DC, a think tank brought together present and former officials from the CIA, DIA, Pentagon “and elsewhere” to discuss, weigh, and debate the potential positive and negative consequences of lifting the decades-old veil of secrecy surrounding what Those in the Know knew about the UFO phenomenon. In the end, the apparently unanimous assessment was that the societal risks were simply too grand in scale and so the coverup should continue. Evidently, those fears were echoed by many of the speakers at the Sol conference, too – some of whom, such as Mellon, paradoxically pushed for disclosure. Another speaker, a retired US Army Colonel by the name of Karl E. Nell, issued a dire warning, however, and he was apparently less contradictory in his position. If this coverup continues, he cautioned, it could result in catastrophic consequences for the US, or what he called a “catastrophic disclosure.”

In fact, ever since the conference, the term “catastrophic disclosure” has repeatedly emerged in podcasts and news reports regarding the UFO issue, and most certainly in the online UFO community, though little time has been dedicated to actually nailing down what is meant by the term. As far as I’ve been able to ascertain, it refers to a hypothetical state of affairs in which these truly “earth-shattering revelations” – the existence of these secret UFO programs, the information they’ve amassed, and no doubt the activities they have engaged in since the cover-up began – were released to the public, either by whistleblowers or US foreign rivals, and consequently generated panic and chaos among the American populace.

These fears, I should add, are by no means anything new. As I’ve written elsewhere, there was a NASA-commissioned study by the Brookings Institution released in 1961 that was entitled Proposed Studies on the Implications of Peaceful Space Activities for Human Affairs. In the UFO community, however, it is most often referred to as The Brooking Report. In a relatively small section of the report, entitled “The implications of a discovery of extraterrestrial life” it is written that:

“Since leadership itself might have great need to gauge the direction and intensity of public attitudes, to strengthen its own morale and for decision making purposes, it would be most advantageous to have more to go on than personal opinions about the opinions of the public and other leadership groups.

The knowledge that life existed in other parts of the universe might lead to a greater unity of men on Earth, based on the ‘oneness’ of man or on the age-old assumption that any stranger is threatening. Much would depend on what, if anything, was communicated between man and the other beings […]

Anthropological files contain many examples of societies, sure of their place in the universe, which have disintegrated when they have had to associate with previously unfamiliar societies espousing different ideas and different life ways; others that survived such an experience usually did so by paying the price of changes in values and attitudes and behavior.

Since intelligent life might be discovered at any time via the radio telescope research presently under way, and since the consequences of such a discovery are presently unpredictable because of our limited knowledge of behavior under even an approximation of such dramatic circumstances, two research areas can be recommended:

Continuing studies to determine emotional and intellectual understanding and attitudes — and successive alterations of them if any — regarding the possibility and consequences of discovering intelligent extraterrestrial life.

Historical and empirical studies of the behavior of peoples and their leaders when confronted with dramatic and unfamiliar events or social pressures. Such studies might help to provide programs for meeting and adjusting to the implications of such a discovery. Questions one might wish to answer by such studies would include: How might such information, under what circumstances, be presented to or withheld from the public for what ends? What might be the role of the discovering scientists and other decision makers regarding release of the fact of discovery?”

While this section of the Brooking Report largely focuses on receiving radio signals from extraterrestrial intelligence, it would have undoubtedly served as a justification for a continuation of any coverup that was already taking place in the 1960s. Such notions were even echoed in a 2010 documentary television mini-series for the Discovery Channel written by Stephen Hawking, theoretical physicist and cosmologist, and largely voiced by actor Benedict Cumberbatch. In the US, it premiered on April 25, where it was called Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking. It subsequently premiered in the UK on May 9th, where it was called Stephen Hawking’s Universe. In any case, Hawkings “said,” in the first episode, entitled, “Aliens”:

“We only have to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn’t want to meet. I imagine they might exist in massive ships, having used up all the resources from their home planet. Such advanced aliens would perhaps become nomads, looking to conquer and colonize whatever planets they can reach. If aliens ever visit us, I think the outcome would be much as when Christopher Columbus first landed in America, which didn’t turn out very well for the Native Americans.”

If the conclusions of the Brooking Report or Hawkings strikes you as unnecessarily paranoid, or at least prematurely paranoid, you are by no means alone. For some time I’ve felt that the true nature of the circumstances was more adequately encapsulated by something Victor Marchetti, former Executive Assistant to the deputy director of the CIA, wrote in an article in the May 1979 issue of Second Look entitled “How the CIA Views the UFO Phenomenon.” While he claimed to have no evidence or first-hand experience that might imply the UFO phenomenon was real (as I suspect he would have to claim, whether or not that statement was true, given the clearance he must have had), his thoughts on the matter, I feel, are rather revealing:

“My theory is that we have, indeed, been contacted — perhaps even visited — by extraterrestrial beings, and that the U.S. Government, in collusion with other national powers of the Earth, is determined to keep this information from the general public. The purpose of the international conspiracy is to maintain a workable stability among the nations of the world and for them, in turn, to retain institutional control over their respective populations. Thus, for these governments to admit there are beings from outer space attempting to contact us, beings with mentalities and technological capabilities obviously far superior to ours, could, once fully perceived by the average person, erode the foundations of the Earth’s traditional power structure. Political and legal systems, religions, economic and social institutions could all soon become meaningless in the mind of the public. The national oligarchical establishments, even civilization as we know it, could collapse into anarchy. Such extreme conclusions are not necessarily valid, but they probably accurately reflect the fears of the ‘ruling class’ of the major nations, whose leaders (particularly those in the intelligence business) have always advocated excessive governmental secrecy as being necessary to preserve ‘national security.’ The real reason for such secrecy is, of course, to keep the public uninformed, misinformed, and, therefore, malleable.”

Marchetti’s belief that the kind of chaos he described likely reflected the fears of the ruling class (though not necessarily reflecting actuality) seems to be reinforced by Putoff’s description of that 2004 meeting and its unanimous conclusions and seems to suggest that these fears of the elite (and others, given that other speakers at the Sol conference seemed to echo these fears) have not diminished over time. Even so, it seems strange to me that while Those in the Know harbor these secrets and have somehow managed to go on with their lives, they nonetheless feel that if the general population knew these secrets they would not only be utterly incapable of handling it, but that society itself would inevitably crumble as a consequence.

To my mind, this reeks of elitism and arrogance.

Yes, exposure of these secrets would result in what has been called in this context, as early as John Mack’s 1994 book Abduction: Human Encounters With Aliens, “ontological shock” – which is the often intensely anxious and disorienting state of consciousness, state of being, that one typically endures when forced to question their former worldview in the presence of new, undeniable revelations. As I’m sure those In the Know are entirely aware of, though, however difficult it may be, one can learn to adapt to this over time, even if they are dealing with it alone – though in this case, their experience may echo an escaped prisoner in Plato’s Allegory of the Cave in his work, Republic, returning to the cave and striving to illuminate the other prisoners with his revelations. In such an experience, the others would (perhaps understandably) scoff at him, as they had not experienced the real world themselves. Even so, the escapee can adapt – and I know this from experience.

If the entire world was let in on the truth, however – if only intellectually, and not through direct experience – they would be bonded through this conceptual trauma, this ontological shock. It would strengthen the ties between us all, as we would all share the experience of this revelation’s shockwaves, and we would all have each other to share our thoughts and emotions with. And those of us who had been given a “heads up,” so to speak, through direct experience? We would be there to help guide the masses to some perhaps small but hopefully detectable degree, as we had been there, done that.

And really, the truth regarding this cannot be concealed forever, so the efforts to maintain it will ultimately prove to be in vain. To my surprise and relief, this was precisely what Nell seemed to be suggesting during The Sol Foundation’s first symposium this November. His perspective was that disclosure in some form is at this point inevitable, and the best means of avoiding potential “catastrophic disclosure” is to engage in a strategic campaign of “controlled disclosure” that would slowly and carefully reveal the formerly concealed truths in the least damaging manner conceivable. This would ultimately shine the proverbial disinfecting sunlight upon the rogue UFO programs, providing proper public transparency, restoring Congressional oversight, and advancing scientific understanding. Though confessing that the target may not be met, and that the goal may be delayed, he also stated that he projected that disclosure could be met in six years, specifically by the first of October, 2030.

Just hearing that gave me hope, but I reiterate: I am not faithful in the least, but merely strive to sustain cautious optimism. Given the recent gutting of The Schumer Amendment, I must confess I feel rather vindicated in my adopted attitude.

Let me try to explain.

One must consider this conference took place in mid-November, when hopes for official, controlled disclosure were still as high as the saucers littering our skies, as this was all due to the annual National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which determines the budget of the US Department of Defense for the year and as a consequence inevitably gets passed in some form of another. The upcoming year’s rendition, however, had within it a bipartisan amendment officially referred to as The UAP Disclosure Act of 2023 (UAPDA), though informally – at least in the circles I tend to spin in – it’s been most often referred to as The Schumer Amendment. As I explained in that previous post:

“The meat of the act, according to Grusch, deals with where it demands that the president establish a 9-person Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Records Review Board within 90 days of FY24 NDAA’s enactment. It states that it must include at least one of each of the following: a current or former national security official, a current or former foreign service official, a scientist or engineer, an economist, a professional historian, and a sociologist and that all members must be granted necessary clearances and accesses. Government agencies and contractors would have 300 days to turn over any NHI data or recovered samples and technology to the board, which would be subject to the power of eminent domain – though, as NewsNation noted, it’s unclear how the legislation would compel them to do so if they showed reluctance. In my eye, it would be similar to how the Pentagon has recently failed its sixth audit in a row without penalty.

At any rate, once the board has received the data, samples, and tech, it would then have 180 days to investigate and then 14 days to publish its findings. The president would have the power to delay the disclosure of certain data if he judged that it posed a risk to national security, but any such postponement would require an unclassified, publicly available reason, and the delayed data would have to be periodically reviewed to assess whether or not conditions had changed and they could now be declassified and released.”

It passed the Senate this summer, yet ultimately got constipated in the House of Representatives by five key Republicans: Mike Turner, Mike Rogers, Mike Johnson, Roger Wicker, and the chinless, shell-less, consistently buffering turtle with a foot and four goddamn toes in the grave, Mitch Motherfucking McConnel. As it turned out, when the NDAA was passed on December 14th, the combined efforts of these five Agents of Epic Asshattery succeeded in removing two incredibly important aspects of the amendment – the presidential panel and the power of eminent domain. The presidential panel would have been cleared and have had the authority to review all data relating to Non-Human Intelligence (NHI) and decide whether and how that data should be disclosed, and their powers of eminent domain would have allowed them to acquire all NHI technology in the possession of government contractors. Now that those two provisions were gone, the UAPDA has essentially had its teeth and claws removed.

And why?

Really consider that question: why the effort to remove these two elements of the amendment specifically? After all, if it turned out what the Discreditors say is true, and there’s nothing of note here to disclose, what would have the harm been in merely passing the amendment in it’s original form? Doesn’t the fact that they defanged and declawed the amendment constitute a form of disclosure in and of itself, revealing with crystalline clarity that they do indeed have something to hide? I’ve yet to hear another suitable explanation.

Had it passed the House, the UAPDA would have surely been a long-overdue, beautifully bipartisan, and truly historic piece of legislation that would have served as the most ethical, rational, and national security-conscious manner through which the truths that certain aspects of the US Government have long held regarding the UFO or UAP phenomenon could have been disclosed to the public. Had the amendment passed without disembowelment, the fully cleared presidential panel with subpoena powers and the power of eminent domain could have collected and reviewed data from the compartmentalized programs in question and then slowly revealed all but the most sensitive data to the public in a carefully controlled fashion over the next six years. It was a fair compromise, methinks: the public slowly learns the truth and the concealers would be exposed, but in the best possible way, given the circumstances.

Now that it’s been defanged and declawed? Well, there have been mixed reactions.

There are those who, while disappointed and frustrated, nonetheless remain upbeat and show determination to keep up the fight that such legislation can eventually be passed – among them Schumer and Rounds, who held a colloquy on December 13, where Schumer said, part:

“… Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena are of immense interest and curiosity to the American people, but with that curiosity comes the risk for confusion, misinformation, and mistrust, especially if the government isn’t prepared to be transparent. The United States government has gathered a great deal of information about UAPs over many decades but has refused to share it with the American people. That is wrong and additionally breeds mistrust. We have also been notified by multiple credible sources that information on UAPs has also been withheld from Congress, which if true is a violation of laws requiring full notification to the legislative branch – especially as it relates to the four congressional leaders, the defense committees, and the intelligence committee.”

He went on to add that:

“… it’s beyond disappointing that the House has refused to work with us on all the important elements of the UAP Disclosure Act during the NDAA conference, but nevertheless, we did make important progress. First, for the first time, the National Archives will gather records from across the federal government on UAPs, and have a legal mandate to release those records to the public if appropriate. This is a major, major win for government transparency on UAPs and it gives us a strong foundation for more action in the future.”

In response, Rounds said:

“I would agree, sir, and I think probably the most significant shortcomings that I think we need to visit about as well, shortcomings of the conference committee agreement that are now being voted on were the rejection, first of all, of a government-wide review board composed of expert citizens, presidentially appointed and Senate confirmed, to control the process of reviewing the records and recommending to the President what records should be released immediately or postponed, and a requirement as a transparency measure for the government to obtain any recovered UAP material or biological remains that may have been provided to private entities in the past and thereby hidden from Congress and the American people. We are lacking oversight opportunities, and we are not fulfilling our responsibilities.”

Hearing two congressmen from both sides of the isle reference not only a UFO coverup but UFO crashes and biological remains is amazing to me, and that helped to temporarily quell my anger and frustration over the gutting of the amendment, as did their commitment to pushing for that presidential panel in the future. It gave me some hope that Controlled Disclosure could still happen – which is to say that it could still unfold through legal means. That the presidential panel, perhaps under the guidance of The Sol Foundation, might reveal the truth to the American public and the world at large through a process least likely to inspire the gravest states of ontological shock.

Unlike Schumer and Rounds, however, some were not only disappointed and frustrated, but downright pissed, and any optimism they might have had with Congress has clearly evaporated, as they’re now calling on the president to circumvent the Congressional avenue and utilize his executive powers to formulate the presidential panel that the House shot down on his own.

In either case, in other words, there is still hope that Controlled Disclosure could still happen.

Others, while clearly just as pissed off, are calling on the powers of bottom-up. At least one person, anyway, and that would be David Grusch himself. His change in demeanor was quite evident in the interview Elizabeth Vargas had with him on NewsNation, and which was posted on December 12. Here Grusch displayed nonverbals that those such as myself, who have paid attention to him since his initial interview by Coulthart in early June, had thus far not been privy to. Removing the amendment’s teeth and claws apparently only sharpened his own teeth and claws.

“What we’re witnessing now is, quite frankly,” he said, “the greatest legislative failure in American history.” He called on the American people to vote out those in Congress, such as Mike Turner, who killed the amendment, and went on to describe how:

“… we have a severe constitutional crisis right now. This is not a laughing matter. We have a severe oversight issue where there’s a caste system of individuals. Previous presidents most likely were abusing their authority under the unitary executive theory, which is a theory that the president, the chief executive, has ultimate power and with the stroke of the pen can decide certain things. So I think we have a severe truth and reconciliation process that we need to start in this country…”

Personally, I advocate all avenues that could lead to disclosure: continue to push Congress to initiate it through legislation, vote out the asshats who gutted the Schumer Amendment, and even push the president to use his executive powers to create the perfectly reasonable panel they poo-pooed. I have the feeling that in the meantime, however, what Nell called Catastrophic Disclosure may unfold, slowly but surely, though it’s unlikely to be given the spotlight by the mainstream media, at least until it cannot possibly be ignored any longer.

Why do I think this?

One should keep in mind that the revelations of David Grusch back in June of this year inspired this modern movement, and I think a lot of Those in the Know with first-hand experience and the journalists they spoke to were following Grusch’s lead, at least up until this point. Rather than blow the whistle on illicit programs through illicit means, as Snowden had, Grusch did it all by the book, above board, under the law, and through appropriate channels. For all the corrupt bullshit he saw, Grusch nonetheless retained his faith his the system, held fast to his patriotism, and truly believed that adhering to this code would ultimately lead to the public knowing the truth. He was relying on the Schumer Amendment to pass, however, and while I imagine he still clings to strands of hope that he can help push for disclosure through legal means, I do wonder if he’ll ultimately reach a breaking point if these efforts continue to be thwarted. After all, regardless of the degree of faith one might have in their social system, ultimately the deep-seated need one feels to do the right thing and fight to expose the truth overcomes the need to adhere to those social conventions, traditional avenues, and established laws that obstruct the pathway to that noble goal.

Now that the amendment has been effectively castrated, no matter how much Grusch may be determined to stick to his guns, those who have been following his lead – those 40-plus individuals who confided in Grush and those who spoke with Coulthart, Shellenberger, and other journalists – may no longer have the confidence or patience in the legal avenue that he’s struggling to hold onto himself. They may become increasingly willing to provide more information on their own, through media or more illicit channels.

So assuming that The Powers That Be were the forces behind the scenes, which I strongly suspect, their act of gutting the Schumer Amendment may have very well have been a goddamn death sentence, as those who wish to pull back the veil and expose these secrets to the world may decide that catastrophic disclosure is the only sure route available to them now. Ultimately, however much chaos it may cause, their growing attitude may become that “that which can be destroyed by the truth, should be.”

SOURCES:

The Sol Foundation website.

The Sol Foundation: How a New Think Tank of Academics is Applying ‘Cutting-Edge Research’ to the UAP Mystery, by Micah Hanks, 9/12/23.

“Retired US Army Colonel says secret UFO projects should be made public by October 2030 – to beat America’s rivals and get ahead of a ‘catastrophic’ leak,” by Matthew Phelan, 11/21/23.

The Sol Foundation Conference: A Great Success and a Greater Issue to Face, by Whitley Strieber, 12/6/23.

“Schumer’s Amendment, Three Mikes, and a Mitch: Constipations in UFO Disclosure,” by Benjamin Anderson, 11/28/03.

Majority Leader Schumer And Republican Senator Mike Rounds Floor Colloquy On Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Provisions In The NDAA And Future Legislation On UAPs.

David Grusch calls on Americans to make UAPs an election issue.

UFOs, the Office of Global Access, and the Spirit of the 4602nd AISS.

On November 28th, 2023, Josh Boswell, Chris Sharp, and Matt Ford published “CIA’s secret office has conducted UFO retrieval missions on at least NINE crash sites around the world, whistle-blowers reveal,” an article for The Daily Mail that reported on the role that the CIA’s Office of Global Access (OGA) allegedly played in UFO recoveries.

According to the article, among the 56 offices in the CIA, and the nine offices in its Science and Technology wing specifically, the OGA was established in 2003 to “integrate analysis, technology, and tradecraft to attack the most difficult targets, and to provide worldwide collection capability.” The OGA specializes in facilitating covert entry into and exit from anywhere globally where individuals would ordinarily be denied access, such as behind enemy lines. According to multiple sources, the article says, while the majority of missions conducted by the OGA deal with mundane and conventional retrieval operations – snatching up the downed tech of our earthly adversaries; that sort of thing – three sources to The Daily Mail, all of whom feared reprisals and so wished to remain anonymous, informed them that since it’s inception the OGA has also been coordinating UFO retrievals for the US from around the world. The office works in concert with Special Forces Operations – Delta Force, SEAL teams – to retrieve craft, be they landed or crashed. After the OGA acquires these UFOs or associated materials, they pass them to private aerospace government contractors. Here, the collected material can be subject to analysis while simultaneously being shielded from audits and oversights, and given the strict compartmentalization, many if not most involved in the analysis may not even realize the nature of what they are studying.

Reading the article, I was suddenly struck by the similarity between the activities of the OGA and the activities initially ascribed to the US Air Force’s 4602nd Air Intelligence Service Squadron (AISS). Created in 1952, the 4602nd was tasked with collecting downed foreign documents, crews, and hardware, and had over a dozen field units spread out all across the US. By the end of 1953 – and perhaps not coincidentally, just after the January 1953 Robertson Panel – the 4602nd was also assigned to investigate UFOs. As far as the public knew at the time, this was Blue Book’s job, but the 4602nd would now be the first to receive UFO reports, deal with those reports that concerned national security issues, and hand down the rest to Blue Book. In July of 1957, the unit changed names. No longer the 4602nd, it was reborn as the 1006th. It again died in April of 1960, now reincarnated as the 1127th USAF Activities Group. And as journalist Ross Coulthart wrote in his 2021 book, In Plain Sight, the efforts went on over time, under different titles:

“In 1961, an AISS operation named Project Moon Dust was tasked in a letter known as the ‘Betz Memo’ to ‘locate, recover and deliver descended foreign space vehicles.’ Another project, Operation Blue Fly, was proposed to deliver the recovered objects to the Foreign Technology Division at Wright Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio. In his 1990 book, Out There, the New York Times journalist Howard Blum asserted that the ‘foreign space vehicles’ the US Air Force sought included craft of extra-terrestrial origin and that Moon Dust was a kind of ‘UFO SWAT team’. The book described the secret team’s role as ‘field exploitation of unidentified flying objects, or known Soviet/Bloc aerospace vehicles, weapons systems, and/or residual components of such equipment.’ Surprisingly, declassified Project Blue Book and US Defense Intelligence Agency files do show the US was involved in a covert worldwide ‘UFO’ investigation and recovery program. Operation Moon Dust definitely involved retrieval of ‘foreign technology’ from other countries, but it also specifically sought ‘Unidentified Flying Objects’ and ‘flying saucers’.”

At the request of the Air Force, a committee was established in 1966 to review the best of Blue Book. Based out of the University of Colorado, it comprised four psychologists, one astrogeologist, one assistant dean of a graduate school, and one physicist – the chairman, Edward Condon, which is why it is often referred to in UFO circles as The Condon Committee. Two years later, in 1968, after studying 59 UFO reports, the Condon Committee released their results, officially entitled, “Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying Objects,” though it has since been far more popularly referred to as the Condon Report. In it’s summary, it states that “[n]o UFO reported, investigated and evaluated by the Air Force was ever an indication of threat to our national security”, though given that since 1953 UFO reports that were judged by the 4602nd and its reincarnations to be matters of national security never even fell into the hands of Blue Book, this conclusion is clearly bullshit. And if one needs further evidence that this is the case, there is the “Trick Memo” found by staff member Ray Craig, handed down to research associate Norman Levine, who in turn provided it to David Sanders, the principal investigator. This memo makes it clear that the whole thing was a ruse from the start.

Nonetheless, based on the recommendations of the Condon Report, Blue Book was terminated in 1969, which for years the US Government as a whole insisted was the end of its interest in the UFO topic. Despite this allegation, we have what is popularly known in UFO circles as “The Bolander Memo,” received through FOIA. Dated October 20, 1969 and signed by Brigadier General C.H. Bolander, it makes clear that, regardless of Blue Book’s closure, UFO reports would “continue to be handled through the standard Air Force procedure designed for this purpose” and “reports of unidentified flying objects which could affect national security […] are not part of the Blue Book system.”

In other words, despite the fact that the Air Force’s public relations front was gone, behind the scenes the spirit of the 4602nd remained as embodied and active as ever – at least at that point. While this is the extent of my limited knowledge regarding the incarnations of these efforts, there are strong suggestions of its survival, if only in spirit, beyond 1969. And if there is any reason to think that spirit continued its clear tendency to reincarnate, there are these recent allegations regarding the CIA’s OGA, which seems to be tasked with executing the same damned activities, though they’ve evidently gotten better at it over the decades. According to The Daily Mail article, after all, one source claimed that the CIA has some sort of “system in place” that can detect cloaked UFOs, and regardless as to whether the “’non-human’ craft land, crash or are brought down to earth, special military units are sent to try to salvage the wreckage” and that at least nine such craft have been recovered, two of them entirely intact, the rest damaged.

There has been a little pushback here, however, and from one I’ve come to consider in-the-know. In a clip from Cuomo’s show on NewsNation on November 29th, in an interview he had with Representative Tim Burchett and Coulthart, Coulthart said:

“What I can tell you is the Office of Global Access is the office in the CIA that has been coordinating this. They have been doing crash-retrievals for many years. One of the things I do take issue with in The Daily Mail’s story today is that they say there’s just nine craft that have been recovered. My understanding is that there are considerably more. And as the article accurately reports, this is done in collaboration with JSOC, the Joint Operations Special Command, notably with special forces drawn primarily from the US Air Force. So yes, the article is accurate, and I’ve got it also confirmed independently by multiple senior intelligence sources.”

Concerning the number of UFO retrievals, he’s not alone in pointing out this discrepancy. In his recent Joe Rogan interview, David Grusch has stated the number of UFO retrievals are in the double-digits, and in his June 7th Substack article, “US Has 12 or More Alien Spacecraft, Say Military And Intelligence Contractors,” a title that I feel speaks for itself, journalist Micheal Shellenberger made the same claim.

This article in The Daily Mail curiously emerges just as the Schumer Amendment (officially known as The UAP Disclosure Act of 2023) to the Fiscal Year 2024 National Defense Authorization Act (FY24 NDAA) has passed in the Senate, but is currently receiving pushback in the House of Representatives. If passed, it will set up a means by which the US Government could, at the presidential level, collect, evaluate, and systematically disseminate over time a disclosure of what the government knows regarding NHIs and their technology to the American people. If the amendment does not pass, many attest, the government will be unable to control the narrative and disclosures through the media, private efforts, and potentially through global adversaries will be the means by which the truth will be delivered to the public.

If the amendment fails to pass, in other words, those in the know who have already spoken to the likes of David Grusch, Ross Coulthart, Micheal Shellenberger, and Congress will have no choice but to enlighten the public through other means, which means that regardless as to whether it’s a global adversary or efforts within the US that spill the beans, such an uncontrolled disclosure may be catastrophic – if not to the populace, at the very least to those Gatekeepers of the Big Secret that sit atop the compartmentalized silos, given safety only by the shadows they have thus far been capable of hiding in.

Schumer’s Amendment, Three Mikes, and a Mitch (Constipations in UFO Disclosure).

The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) is an annual act that specifies the annual budget of the US Department of Defense – in short, it funds the military. As a consequence, as I’m sure you can imagine, it’s an act that inevitably passes in some form or another every fucking year. Well, this upcoming year’s version – known as the Fiscal Year 2024 National Defense Authorization Act (FY24 NDAA) – has an amendment officially known as The UAP Disclosure Act of 2023. However, it’s been frequently referred to as The Schumer Amendment. As with the recent, historical UFO hearing, the act is bipartisan, sponsored by Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Mike Rounds (R-SD), as well as Rubio, Gillibran, Young, and Heinrich.

At roughly forty-six minutes into a recent The Joe Rogan Experience podcast (#2065), whistleblower David Grusch revealed that a few months before he went public he learned about The Schumer Amendment, and this served as just another reason he blew the whistle. Given the data he’d gathered from his duties, he felt he was the only one who had the opportunity to do so, and he also felt those behind the amendment would be hesitant to go forward with it all unless they had something to point to publically.

The meat of the act, according to Grusch, deals with where it demands that the president establish a 9-person Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Records Review Board within 90 days of FY24 NDAA’s enactment. It states that it must include at least one of each of the following: a current or former national security official, a current or former foreign service official, a scientist or engineer, an economist, a professional historian, and a sociologist and that all members must be granted necessary clearances and accesses. Government agencies and contractors would have 300 days to turn over any NHI data or recovered samples and technology to the board, which would be subject to the power of eminent domain – though, as NewsNation noted, it’s unclear how the legislation would compel them to do so if they showed reluctance. In my eye, it would be similar to how the Pentagon has recently failed its sixth audit in a row without penalty.

At any rate, once the board has received the data, samples, and tech, it would then have 180 days to investigate and then 14 days to publish its findings. The president would have the power to delay the disclosure of certain data if he judged that it posed a risk to national security, but any such postponement would require an unclassified, publicly available reason, and the delayed data would have to be periodically reviewed to assess whether or not conditions had changed and they could now be declassified and released.

Though I have thus far been unable to find it in the act myself, according to Grusch, it also outlines a controlled UAP disclosure plan that is six years in length, conceivably from 2024 to 2030.

During his Rogan interview, or conversation, or whatever, he mentioned how it passed the Senate with flying colors, but – as he was told by his connections on The Hill – it was receiving pushback in the House. He mentioned only two individuals during the podcast: Mike Turner and Mike Rodgers.

Representative Mike Turner (R-OH) is the Chair of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Grusch went to Turner’s committee in December of 2022 to give them a classified briefing, and while Turner himself wasn’t there, his staff and lawyers were. Despite providing all the data he could in the time he was given, after the UFO hearing in late July, Turner went on Fox Business and, though only calling him a “whistleblower” and not calling him out by name, essentially claimed Grusch didn’t know what he was talking about.

Not coincidentally, I strongly suspect, he’s from Dayton, Ohio, where he once served as mayor. Dayton, of course, is the home of Wright Patterson Air Force Base, the former location of Projects Sign, Grudge, and Blue Book, which collectively studied UFO sightings from 1948 to 1969, and is also where Roswell wreckage is allegedly stored, home of the mythical Blue Room – and so on, and so on. As Grusch himself stated, that’s, well, more than slightly suspicious. It also doesn’t help that – as Grusch made mention of and I subsequently confirmed for myself – Turner was listed in 2010 by the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington as one of the 26 most corrupt members of Congress. Among his top donors are Lockheed and Boeing.

Aside from blocking the bill, according to staffers Grusch says he’s talked to in the past two weeks Turner is also looking to fund an opposition candidate for Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN 2nd District) in 2024. I immediately saw the relevance here. While I no longer pledge allegiance to either of the political parties, by nature I lean to the left, and though I know nothing of Burchett’s values and ideals beyond his determination to overcome the political polarization in this country and his outspoken stance on the UFO issue, I’ve come to deeply respect the guy since Grusch came on the scene – and yes, despite the fact that he’s a Republican. He comes across as a nice guy, constantly calling his interviewers “brother” and frequently spouting the phrase “dadgummit,” much to my amusement. He has spoken on numerous news programs and podcasts in support of UFO disclosure, and it doesn’t surprise me in the least that those like Turner who clearly desire to sustain the government secrecy and cultural stigma surrounding the UFO subject would want to kick Burchett off the Congressional podium and slap the megaphone from his hands.

So, yeah: fuck Turner.

Mike Rogers (R-AL, 3rd District), is the Chair for the House Committee on Armed Services, and Grusch seemed confused by his participation in this, though he didn’t go into any detail as to why.

According to Grusch, the alleged reason for the pushback was essentially that the proposed UAP Review Board demanded by the Schumer Amendment allegedly echoed the duties already ascribed to the DOD’s ARRO office which, as Grusch described it, is a load of horse shit. ARRO is within the DOD and the Intelligence Community (IC), he explained, not above it, at the presidential level, where the board would be – where it would have presidential authority over all other agencies, capable of extracting the aforementioned data, samples, and technology and having the authority to declassify them and provide them to the public.

The efforts of the two Mikes were bothersome enough, but more dire bullshit was to follow.

Subsequently, via Reddit, I came upon more fuel for my pessimism. This is where I learned of an article published in the Liberation Times, written by one Christopher Sharp on November 24th entitled, Black Friday: Republican Leadership Takes Axe To UFO Transparency Legislation,” and, given my clearly masochistic bent, I proceeded to read it. To no surprise, this article confirmed what Grusch had already announced three days earlier, namely that Rogers and Turner have sought to squash the Schumer Amendment. They added, however, that the disclosure-phobic Mikes had also recruited to their cause the new Speaker of the House, Representative Mike Johnson, thereby completing a trinity of Mikes that I passionately want to slap the everliving shit out of. In addition, they recruited the chinless, perpetually buffering, turtle-devoid-of-a-shell, and presumably sociopathic Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnel.

I should add that I wasn’t exactly a fan of McConnel before all of this, but now, now that he’s joined the Disclosure Resistance Campaign? Now? Now the only two things preventing me from supporting his lynching by a mob are my fundamental ethics (rooted in my empathy, reason, and respect for due process) and the fact that it would be far, far too difficult to ascertain where his face ends and his neck begins.

And yes, this is a joke, not an authentic death threat. I’m not serious. It’s a dark joke, but a joke nonetheless. Don’t, like, cancel me and shit.

To go on, however, on the same day the article was published, Ross Coulthart tweeted on X, or whatever it is you now call posting something on what was formerly known as Twitter, regarding the Liberation Times article:

“This story is 100% accurate. An extremely powerful Defense Aerospace lobby is pushing key politicians in Congress to block the Schumer Amendment to the NDAA.”

Count me among the utterly unsurprised.

And wait, dear readers: there is even more disturbing news.

“It is understood that the four powerful Republicans are prepared to ‘compromise’ by amending language contained in the Act,” so The Liberation Times article went on to say, “although that would involve stripping it of its key provisions and crippling the Act of any meaningful power.”

Of course, I couldn’t help to think to myself. Of course, that’s the case. Why would I expect any different? Please, please tell me there’s still hope…

“One source familiar with the current NDAA conference process, which reconciles differences between House and Senate versions through negotiation,” the article went on, “told Liberation Times,” and I quote:

“It’s a shame that such monumental legislation is the victim of political brinkmanship. Neither of the detractors gives a hoot about serving the public interest and instead wants to use this amendment as leverage to get their own political interests codified.

When supposed “leaders” like this use the American people’s interests as their fodder, we should be reminded of what sparked the American Revolution in the first place. These individuals would be wise to remember that.”

The article goes on to emphasize, however, that bipartisan members within the Senate, House, and White House are determined to resist any attempts to soften or terminate the language of the act – and specifically mention, among this joint effort, Biden’s National Security Advisor, Jake Sullivan, as well as long-standing disclosure proponent John Podesta, as well as members of Congress that include Rubio, Luna, Gallagher, and – of course, dadgummit – that outspoken motherfucker Burchett as well.

Here’s the thing: if the true motivation behind the effort to maintain the secrecy and prevent disclosure isn’t just for a minority to sustain power over the majority (as knowledge is power, after all), then it has to be the fear of how the populace will react or respond to these revelations or how the NHI will respond to the disclosure to the populace. And if that’s the case, the true, underlying motivation is to kick the can down the road, to pass the buck, to postpone the inevitable.

The inevitable, however, is the inevitable, and the act – or rather, inaction – inherent in not disclosing it yourself does not prevent its disclosure, it merely prevents you from disclosing it, and if someone else discloses it before you, they have the power, they have the greatest conceivable amount of control over the narrative, and in the aftermath you’re left in the dark, dethroned. Silence and lies: they can serve you for a time, but never forever. Best to get ahead of it. Best to do so before someone else steals your thunder.

Do you feel it? Do you sense the penetrating silence? That’s the experience one has before a storm. And make no mistake, that thunderous monster is rolling in.

The three Mikes and a Mitch? They signify nothing less, nothing more than the death rattle of the biggest secret.

In the article mentioned above, The Liberation Times provided a quote from an unnamed source who they claimed had “knowledge of the current situation regarding the NDAA negotiations,” and this source had a damned good point:

“We’ve got a problem. Russia or China may beat the United States to disclosing the facts around a non-human intelligence if we don’t get our act together fast. This should be motivation enough for Republican leadership to fight for the UAP Disclosure Act.

They should be doing everything in their power to get it passed expeditiously. I’m baffled.”

As am I, anonymous source to Liberation Times. As am I.

On How UFO Disclosure Could Save Us All.

“From space, you realize how small and interconnected we all are. It’s a perspective that can inspire us to be better stewards of our planet and work towards a brighter future.”
— Scott Kelly.

“From space, you see the fragility of our planet and the urgent need to protect it. We are all astronauts on this spaceship Earth.”
— Jean-Francois Clervoy.

“You develop an instant global consciousness, a people orientation, an intense dissatisfaction with the state of the world, and a compulsion to do something about it. From out there on the moon, international politics look so petty. You want to grab a politician by the scruff of the neck and drag him a quarter of a million miles out and say, ‘Look at that, you son of a bitch.’”
— Edgar Mitchell.

After I had delved head first into the subject matter back in high school, a friend of mine heard me criticizing the government cover-up and asked me why I thought it was so important that they disclose what they knew about the subject, particularly since to his eyes, I bought into it all anyway. While I don’t recall how I answered back then, I’m more than prepared to answer why, at this point in my life, I think official UFO disclosure is so important.

One reason, I confess, is rather selfish: I am chronically filled with doubt. There is little if anything in my life that I invest one hundred percent certainty in, and with respect to the weird shit in my life, there have been periods of intense, soul-crushing doubt of varying degrees. If the truth were to be disclosed, I’d finally know with something more approximating certainty that I’m not simply bat-shit insane – and I could feel more comfortable talking with others about it, as my fears of them labeling me bat-shit insane would also, as a result, be significantly reduced.

In essence, I wouldn’t feel so alone in this.

Not only that but deeper questions may be answered as well. If disclosure were to happen the way so many have imagined it officially, it would likely stretch beyond the mere official confirmation that these craft exist and are operated by advanced, non-human intelligence (NHIs) – things that at this point are pretty damn obvious anyway. There would be details. If what David Grusch says is true, for instance – and I am reasonably confident at this point that it is – then there is an expansive Program involving elements of the US intelligence agency, defense contractors, and the Five Eyes alliance that has been involved in retrieving NHI “biologics” and technology and has made efforts to reserve-engineer and replicate that technology for the last eight or nine decades in an effort to win a secret, multi-decade cold war they’ve had with similar programs developed by our geopolitical adversaries.

If so, they must, at the very least, have developed educated hypotheses regarding the origins, nature, purpose, and capabilities of the NHI, all of which I am far more interested in than the mere confirmation of their existence. And while I’m not at all convinced they’ve successfully reverse-engineered and replicated the craft, I also think it’s impossible that they could have been studying such things, particularly for this length of time, without developing both scientific understanding and technological breakthroughs that, if accessible to the public, could transform society for the better in ways we couldn’t even currently comprehend,

There’s a bigger, far grander reason why I think disclosure is so vitally important, however, and it has to do with the psychological effect this might have on the human species.

During periods in which I either know or suspect I’ve been in contact or have had a resurgence of my recurring dreams regarding UFOs, I’m typically left in the wake of it with this peculiar, dark, expansive mood or state of consciousness that forces me into something akin to a third person perspective. It temporarily makes all my personal, worldly concerns and even many of the collective things we tend to value seem petty, ridiculous, trivial, childlike, immature, and ultimately irrelevant in comparison to what’s “out there.” For years I’ve struggled to articulate it, though I think I’ve gotten a better grasp on it now: it leaves me with the unshakable feeling that our island earth and the global human civilization is essentially the cosmic equivalent to North Sentinel Island.

Let me explain.

The residents of North Sentinel Island, the Sentinelese, have occupied that island for roughly 60 thousand years with only minimal contact with the outside world, and over that period of time, their knowledge and way of life have apparently changed very little. It’s thought that they have yet to learn how to even generate fire on their own. They live in huts, fashion spears and make canoes to fish in the waters around their island. It’s easy to imagine that they have their social squabbles and consider it to have all the importance in the world, all the while utterly blind to the greater global and historical context in which they’re inescapably embedded.

After all, they have had no knowledge of the agricultural or industrial revolution, the theory of evolution, the existence of DNA, or the science of genetic engineering. To see a locomotive would blow their mind, let alone a Tesla or the rockets we launch into space. An iPhone would be a flat, smooth, shiny, magical rock to them – a miniature version of the monolith from 2001: A Space Odyssey – and they probably couldn’t wrap their mind around the internet. Just think for a moment how they’d react to robots, commercial drones, virtual reality, and our awesome medical technology. Consider how they know nothing of the satellites orbiting around the earth, of the probes and rovers we’ve created that explore the moon, Mars, and asteroids, or the five probes of ours that are on their way out of the solar system as we speak.

Hell, they’re entirely ignorant of the fact that we long ago discovered the earth is but one of many planets revolving around our star, the sun, and that our solar system is but one of countless other star systems in our galaxy, which is but one of many galaxies in the known universe, and that cosmology and quantum physics is seriously considering that our universe may be but one of multiple, perhaps infinite universes. They may not even know that there are other islands, and other continents, and almost certainly know nothing of countries, alliances between such countries, global trade, or that they have lived through two world wars. They know nothing of the threat of climate change or nuclear war, both threats generated by the global society they know nothing of and play no role in, but which threaten their very existence just the same.

In essence, they know nothing of the global, political, economic, and cosmic context they are embedded within. They don’t even know that their island is “owned” by India and that India has effectively quarantined the island, having set up patrols in the surrounding waters to ensure that everyone just leaves them the fuck alone. Now, we have checked up on them from time to time, some bold people have slipped through the cracks and encountered groups of islanders, but how would the greater populace take to their stories? Maybe they’d be called crazy, maybe they’d be believed, and yet, over the generations, those tales would likely evolve into myth and religion. One only has to take a good, hard look at cargo cults to see what could happen.

Now consider that there may very well be a cosmic community of extraterrestrial intelligence that treats the earth and its inhabitants much in the same way we treat North Sentinel Island and the Sentinelese. Compared to them, we may be just as primitive if not more so, and their knowledge is likely as ineffable to us as ours would be to the Sentinelese, and their technological capabilities just as equivalent to magic to our eyes. They may patrol the interstellar space around our star system in an attempt to quarantine us from other forces, and while their motives and methods might be vastly different, and they might be more involved with us in some important ways, the analogy is still incredibly useful in my eyes.

While I had been aware of the island for some time and had vague notions as to how it might be used as an analogy for our cosmic circumstance, it was Eric Weinstein who fleshed out the general idea in a relatively recent appearance he made on The Joe Rogan Experience. He only used this analogy as a launch pad, however, and went on to ask important questions that extended the analogy. We quarantined North Sentinel Island not just because they had no immunity to the diseases that we carry and to which they had no immunity and which we would likely transmit to them upon contact, but because our minimal contact with them over history – perhaps inspired in part by how we may have spread disease among them in the aftermath – has made it clear that they don’t want to be bothered. While he failed to mention it, I also think that we might have the natural impulse to protect them from the circumstances of the modern world in the same way we wish to protect young children, endangered species, or natural habitats.

In essence, in our global case, some rendition of what is known as the Zoo Hypothesis.

He asked us to imagine how our attitude towards the Sentinelese might change, however, if they suddenly started advancing as the global community did – and while it constitutes a leap in the analogy, it remains an important question to contemplate. How would we react, for instance, if we suddenly became aware that the Sentinelese had set off an atomic bomb?

The children are growing up, and in so doing, we’d conclude, they’re well on their way to becoming a threat to not only themselves but to us all.

As a consequence, perhaps we would increase our surveillance of them, and perhaps their technological evolution would have made our former, more limited presence more detectable anyway. In any case, given their growing understanding of the world around them and how they applied it in their technology, their perspective on us would stray from the former myths and be closer to an actual understanding, though they may not connect their former myths to what they were now seeing. Even with respect to what they were now seeing, many of them might deny that we constitute the solution to their equivalent to the Fermi Paradox.

Maybe we would begin to make contact with them in slow, cautious, measured steps, always assessing their reactions so as to not push them too far too fast. And perhaps that may be akin to what our global circumstance has been since we began denoting nuclear weapons in the 1940s. Perhaps a community of NHI began an enduring process – forged, for all we know, from former experiences with countless other North Sentinel Island Earths – of acclimating us to their presence in preparation for the inevitable revelation of the greater cosmic context to which we are in some senses unfortunately, in some senses fortunately, but in any case, irrevocably embedded. So the UFO phenomenon blasted into collective consciousness during the First World War, though reached its crest during the summer of 1947, with “occupant cases” or Close Encounters of the Third Kind breaking through into collective awareness within the following decade, and alleged meetings between these NHI and our so-called leaders to follow.

Regardless of the truth of the matter, the essence of the North Sentinel Island analogy certainly describes how I feel in the wake of my recurring UFO dreams, UFO encounters, and alien encounters and abductions, and research has revealed to me that I am by no means alone by any measure: others, in all three categories, feel remarkably similar to the way that I feel. We are part of something bigger, some greater context to which we are utterly unaware, and before which we stand in an eerie mix of terror and awe, the signs of which make us feel small in surface comparison but somehow grand through our deep sense of connection.

This shift in mood, cognition, and perspective we feel in the wake of these encounters, as well as the general trigger, has been explored in at least a general sense elsewhere, though never directly associated with alien encounters or the UFO phenomenon. In short, the experience seems strangely related to what has been called the Numinous experience and the Overview Effect.

The earliest source was theologian Rudolf Otto, who wrote the book The Idea of the Holy, which was originally published in German in 1917 and later translated into English in 1923. According to Otto, “the holy” could be described as containing two distinct elements, one being moral perfection, which I feel to be irrelevant here, and the other which he referred to as the numinous, which he claimed could only be understood through experience, yet which I described the best I could in a former blog post nonetheless:

“The numinous experience was itself composed of three parts, all articulated in the Latin phrase “mysterium tremendum et fascinans.” In short, this roughly translates to English as “a fearful and fascinating mystery,” though in efforts to further to flesh out the concept, it seems best to break it down in more detail, namely word by word.

By “mysterium,” he means to convey the notion of what he refers to as “the wholly other.” This is something so utterly alien to our ordinary experience that it generates a state of astonishment or wonder in us — one that is so absolute it leaves us in a state of silence and stupor. Then there is the element of “tremendum” or “mysterium tremendum,” which leaves us feeling small, utterly insignificant, frustratingly inadequate and ultimately terrified before its awesome and overwhelming power. Last yet equally significant is the vital ingredient of “fascinans” or “mysterium fascinans,” which is to say a charm or attractive quality which inspires in us an allure or fascination despite the simultaneous, aforementioned terror.

And in the midst of these echoing dream themes or an actual sighting or encounter, being before these UFOs does indeed elicit the sense of being in the presence of something terrifyingly and fascinatingly alien …”

With this notion of the numinous held firmly in mind, I’d like to now turn attention toward what has come to be known as the Overview Effect, which was first predicted, albeit in a vague sense, in 1948 by astronomer Fred Hoyle, though the term itself was first coined in the 1980s by philosopher and author Frank White, who fleshed it out as he later went on to interview astronauts about their actual experiences when viewing the earth from space. Elsewhere, this experience has been referred to as the Orbital Perspective, the Astronaut’s Secret, and astronaut Edgar Mitchell called it the Big Picture Effect – and in the case of Mitchell’s experience, which took place on the moon rather than the more typically experienced view from low earth orbit, even Frank White elected to distinguished it from the typical Overview Effect, christening it instead as the Universal Perspective.

When many astronauts come to view the planet Earth from space, they have a profound and overwhelming perceptual, emotional, cognitive, and even spiritual shift in consciousness that leads them to an elevated sense of connection to the earth and its inhabitants as a whole, often resulting in a transformation in their self-concept and value system that tends to grow over time. In attempts to summarize it, terms such as “self-transcendence” and “awe” are often employed. Much as in the case of Otto’s numinous experience, it is said that experience is required to truly understand it.

Both the numinous experience and the Overview Effect involve an alteration in consciousness and associated shift in overall perspective triggered by personal experience – though there is evidence that conceptual, intellectual understanding spawned by indirect stimuli may trigger the general effects as well. Frank white, who coined the term Overview Effect, described having had a brief taste of the experience while looking out an aircraft window as he flew across the country, after all, and some attribute the 1968 “Earthrise” photo, taken from the moon by Apollo 8 astronaut William Anders, as inspiring the first Earth Day in April of 1970, and the environmental movement that surrounded it. Some have seemed to touch upon the surface of this experience, at the very least, through a photo taken, largely due to Carl Sagan’s suggestion, by NASA’s Voyager 1 space probe from a distance of 3.7 billion miles from Earth on February 14, 1990. It certainly seems that Sagan encountered something akin to this experience, given what he conveyed about the image in his 1994 book, Pale Blue Dot:

“From this distant vantage point, the Earth might not seem of any particular interest. But for us, it’s different. Consider again that dot. That’s here. That’s home. That’s us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every “superstar,” every “supreme leader,” every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there – on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.

The Earth is a very small stage in a vast cosmic arena. Think of the rivers of blood spilled by all those generals and emperors so that, in glory and triumph, they could become the momentary masters of a fraction of a dot. Think of the endless cruelties visited by the inhabitants of one corner of this pixel on the scarcely distinguishable inhabitants of some other corner, how frequent their misunderstandings, how eager they are to kill one another, how fervent their hatreds.

Our posturings, our imagined self-importance, the delusion that we have some privileged position in the Universe, are challenged by this point of pale light. Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves.

The Earth is the only world known so far to harbor life. There is nowhere else, at least in the near future, to which our species could migrate. Visit, yes. Settle, not yet. Like it or not, for the moment the Earth is where we make our stand.

It has been said that astronomy is a humbling and character-building experience. There is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than this distant image of our tiny world. To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another, and to preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we’ve ever known.”

I can’t help but hypothesize that revelations that the human species is not only not the lone intelligence in the cosmos but that a community of ETI not only exists and is aware of us but has been consistently interacting with us would if officially disclosed and publicly accepted, result in a collective shift in consciousness that would serve to change humanity for the better. Now it could be that these ETI don’t exactly have our best interests in mind, that they consider us the way we consider other lifeforms on our planet, all of whom we generally perceive as being lower on the food chain than ourselves – that they might see us not as primitives, as we see the Sentinelese, but as animals to be studied, used in experiments, adopted as pets, trained to serve as slaves, or even used as sources of nourishment. Even so, such knowledge is our right. It would at least give us the ability to make more educated decisions and provide us with a context in which to make such decisions, and consequently elevate our species and potentially place us on a more productive, compassionate, and sustainable path.

In the absence of official disclosure, however, I fear that this potential path is unnecessarily constipated – and I might add, unethically so. Given the knowledge the alleged Gatekeepers of truth must have amassed since the birth of the Program, a good sense of whatever grander cosmic context we’re embedded in must be well within their line of sight, and to deny it to the public is blatantly unethical. That knowledge should be a human right. The conspiracy of silence they’ve sustained, the program of disinformation and ridicule they’ve continued to engage in – it all constitutes a crime of the highest order.

Such a disclosure, such a revelation, could utterly transform the collective human perspective, and at a time where I personally feel – and I sense I’m not alone in this assessment – we could use it most. It might inspire us to overcome our petty divisions, to stop seeing ourselves as a member of a tribe or a state or country but rather as part of a global community with grander ties to an interstellar one.

We deserve to know. We have a need to know.

Our very survival might depend on it.

On the Smear Campaign Against David Grusch.

“… the four basic rules of the true UFO non-believers:
1. Don’t bother me with the facts; my mind is made up.
2. What the public doesn’t know, I am not going to tell them.
3. If one can’t attack the data, attack the people. It is much easier.
4. Do your research by proclamation rather than investigation. No one will know the difference.”
Flying Saucers and Science, by Stanton T. Friedman, MSc., (p 39).
(Emphasis mine.)

Before Ross Coulthart’s interview with David Grusch, portions of which were first aired on NewsNation on June 5th, I had never even heard of NewsNation. It would appear I’m not alone, either, as that interview has apparently increased NewsNation’s popularity (which makes it a likely target of the Discreditors in the future, I realize).

In that light, it should come as no surprise that they’ve continued following the story. And given my interest in the subject, and in Grusch’s claims in particular, I suppose it should come as no surprise that I’ve been following the story through NewsNation and anyone else that has been willing to follow it, which, in the media, has been restricted, for the most part, to Rising and Breaking Points.

After Grusch’s NewsNation interview, the next time he was seen on video was the House Oversight Committee’s hearing on July 26th, 2023, where he reiterated all that he knew, or at least that which he could speak about publically, in generalities: that due to interviewing over 40 high-ranking military officials with direct access, he had concluded that aspects of the US government, along with it’s “five eye” allies and defense contractors, were conducting a broad, ongoing, multi-decade Non-Human Intelligence (NHI) UFO retrieval and reverse-engineering program that has shielded its activities and efforts within Special Access Programs (SAPs) nested within several different agencies of the US Government in an effort to dodge Congressional oversight. Furthermore, our adversaries had similar programs and we have been engaging in a secret Cold War with them with respect to replicating this otherworldly tech, and a broad disinformation campaign has been underway to keep the public in the dark.

It was only a matter of time before The Powers That Be, those Gatekeepers of secrets, fired back at him publically, and that time? I see evidence that it has come.

1. Grusch’s Phone Call From The Intercept.

I’ve been following the currently developing chapter of the story since August 9th, when it broke on Cuomo’s new show on NewsNation, where he had a brief interview with Coulthart. Evidently, Grusch was contacted the previous day by The Intercept, an online news magazine, ahead of an article they planned on publishing and they were asking him about his medical records from five years ago. The article, he learned, was to deal with – as Grusch phrased it in his statement to NewsNation – “two incidents in 2014 and 2018 that highlight personal struggles” he endured “with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Grief and Depression.”

Assuming the journalist had simply done his homework, Coulthart said, Grusch then checked with the local sheriff’s department where he had lived at the time to confirm his suspicion that the journalist had received the police records dealing with the incident through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, though the department allegedly denied that this was the case. Having seemingly eliminated this possibility, the only other source that could have provided this data was the intelligence community (IC), who had previously reviewed these incidents due to his security clearance. They would have access to the police reports, one would imagine, and certainly have access to his medical records as well – the medical files that, again, according to Coulthart, The Intercept had asked him about specifically during their phone call to him. Such medical files are supposed to be private, so if the IC had indeed leaked these files to the journalist, which was what was implied, they would have done so in violation of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA).

It immediately struck me that this would be a suspiciously dumb move of the IC, as it had been the determination of the Inspector General of the IC over a year ago, in July of 2022, that Grusch was already a victim of reprisals and that there was an ongoing investigation. So while additional reprisals such as this, which could be rather easily confirmed through a process of elimination, seemed to me to be sloppy at best, given Grusch’s history of reprisals, his assumption that someone in the IC had leaked this in the wake of his congressional testimony in an effort to discredit him wasn’t that much of a leap. Not from his perspective or those closest to him, anyway.

In addition to Grusch’s own historical context, there is a greater historical context to take into consideration as well. As Coulthart explained in Cuomo’s interview with him, this wouldn’t be the first time the IC has taken such illicit action against whistleblowers. He was quick to bring up the case of Daniel Ellsberg, who just passed away on June 16th of this year. He provided the news media with The Pentagon Papers in 1971, in turn inspiring the Nixon administration to create “The White House Plumbers,” a covert unit assembled to deal with leaked, classified information. The Plumbers subsequently broke into the office of Ellsberg’s psychiatrist, Lewis J. Fielding, in an unsuccessful effort to obtain information they could use to discredit him.

In a later interview Cuomo had with Representative Byron Donalds (R-Fla.), Donalds mentions how several people running for Congress have also had their military records illegally released by someone in the IC or Pentagon. In addition, there is the fact that the IC has been warned against taking action against UFO whistleblowers in particular.

While all of the above occurred ahead of the article’s publication, it’s most unfortunate that the interview Coulthart had with Grusch on June 5th wasn’t subsequently released in its entirety, as it might have at least minimized whatever negative impact the article, now published, will ultimately have. There was a portion of that interview in which these incidents, however briefly, were indeed addressed – though this portion was not aired at the time. They did play it during Cuomo’s August 9th interview with Coulthart, however, and they reveal that Grusch wasn’t trying to hide these struggles. On the contrary, he was instantly open and honest about that period of his life, going so far as to encourage others with PTSD – particularly his fellow veterans – to get the help they need.

“I served in Afghanistan and I had a friend that committed suicide after I got back,” Grusch had told Coulthart. “I dealt with that for a couple years and I’m proud as a veteran not to become a statistic. Totally took care of that issue in my life and it doesn’t affect me anymore.”

2. The Article.

Until the article was published on August 10th, no one in the media who bothered to cover the story felt it fit to point an accusatory finger at the reporter, even in the subtlest manner. Cuomo, Coulthart, and (though granted, it was only implied) even Grusch seemed to accept that the reporter, who to my knowledge they even failed to mention by name at this point, was simply doing his job: he was given tips, following up on leads, doing research, putting it all together, and writing up a story. To the contrary, all accusatory fingers were pointed at whoever leaked the information, which – based on available and, in retrospect, perhaps naively embraced information – was presumed to be the IC.

Then, however, the article was published.

In that article, it was claimed that rather than medical records leaked by the IC, as Grusch and the rest had apparently been indirectly led to believe, the reporter had indeed received police records through FOIA – and, if there was any doubt, the FOIA request and the records obtained were provided along with the article. The names and other information that would directly identify the individuals had been redacted, and only the addresses remained, though it would be easy to tie individuals to the residences they lived in at the time.

The first incident, of which there is very little data, occurred on October 13, 2014, when Grusch, then 27, reportedly threatened suicide at a Leesburg, Virginia property owned at the time by both him and his now ex-wife, Kendall McMurray, with the report making references violence as well as his access to a weapon – though the call was canceled shortly thereafter, prior to the dispatch of any officers.

Almost four years later, on October 1st, 2018, the second and more enduring incident occurred, and given it occurred during the same month, it leads me to suspect that October was, for at least some time, a trying month for him. In any case, at roughly 6:51 PM Officer Lewis R. McClenahan was dispatched to 15624 Avebury Manor Place in response to an alleged suicide threat reported to the Loudoun County Sheriff’s Office by Jessica, the present wife of David Grusch. In talking with her, McClenahan learned that earlier that evening, upon seeing that he was drunk, she had confronted him, informing him that he was an alcoholic and needed to get help, to which he replied, “I’ve just been waiting for you to kill me.”

He was reportedly also quite upset that his three handguns were locked up in the closet in their master bedroom, which she had apparently done out of concerns that he may use them to follow through with his former threats of suicide – which she also said he often made when intoxicated, though added that he had never actually harmed himself.

The report added that he may be suffering from PTSD.

Another officer tried to call him to no avail, so McClenahan then went to his house and knocked on the door. He didn’t answer. They then explained the process for obtaining an Emergency Custody Order (ECO) to his wife, and she decided to get the magistrate to issue it. At 8:30 PM, the magistrate issued the ECO and McClenahan returned to Grusch’s house at 9:45, placed him into custody, and transported him to a local emergency room, where he was interviewed by a mental health professional who determined he should be put under a Temporary Detention Order, after which he was transferred to Loudoun Adult Medical Psychiatric Services.

In an interview Saagar and Krystal Ball had with the reporter on their show, Breaking Points, the reporter mentioned that he believes Grusch was released the following day.

To be fair, neither Grusch in his brief statement to NewsNation nor in the newly released portion of his original NewsNation interview with Coulthart — nor Coulthart when he was interviewed by Cuomo — mentioned the factor of alcohol in these incidents, though I do think it may have been an innocent omission. After all, when The Intercept contacted Grusch ahead of the article, they allegedly asked him about medical records, not police reports, and given the apparent faulty information given to Grusch by the sheriff’s office, the implication was that the focus of the article would be on his PTSD, which I assume would have been the emphasis in his medical records. As it turned out, his PTSD diagnosis had but a single, passing mention in the article when it was ultimately published, which makes sense, given what turned out to be the actual source of the data.

In the days that followed, those who were pro-Grusch tended to focus on the PTSD, without any mention of the alcohol abuse; those who were anti-Grusch tended to focus on the boozing while critiquing his supporters for only focusing on the PTSD. Both parties seem to miss the point, in my opinion, which is that many of those who suffer from PTSD often turn to alcohol as a form of self-medication, as it quells their anxiety, dulls their constant state of alertness, and allows them to drift into a state approximating sleep, which is rather difficult when your dealing with flashbacks of the traumas in question.

Grusch confessed to having had issues dealing with what he saw during his time in Afghanistan, during which I imagine he saw many of his friends die rather gruesomely, and with respect to an incident, after he returned home, in which a friend of his committed suicide shortly after speaking with him on the phone. Given his character, which betrays his desire to belong to a group, a family, or something greater than himself, it doesn’t surprise me at all that these circumstances would have hit him hard and ripped him up from the inside out. The police report of 2018 reported that he was treated for his understandable trauma, however. After openly confessing to the general issue in Coulthart’s interview with him, he openly and boldly proclaims he got the help that he needed and got beyond it, and it doesn’t affect him anymore.

The clear implication of the article, however, is that it does – and that furthermore, it somehow disqualifies him and all he has revealed, to both the public and our elected representatives, regarding the 40-plus high-ranking officials he speaks on behalf of. That strikes me as fucking ludicrous.

3. The Klippenstein Interviews: PTSD, Alcohol Abuse, & Security Clearances.

On August 11th, on Breaking Points, both Krystal and Saagar interviewed Ken Klippenstein, the journalist who wrote The Intercept article in question, and from what can be gathered from that interview, this is how the article came about and the motives behind it.

Klippenstein had heard Grusch’s claims, certainly through the hearing and presumably elsewhere, and freely admits he didn’t “believe in the UFO stuff” and thinks that Grusch “is incorrect about it,” yet is also convinced that Grusch himself is being sincere in the sense that he believes what he’s saying. To anyone familiar with the UFO subject as a whole, this perception is one that many Discreditors and Skeptics have chosen to express in recent years. It essentially amounts to a style of character assassination that is at once more compassionate and more patronizing than simply calling someone a liar, as while they are not questioning the sincerity of the character of the individual in question, they are at the same time implying that they’re incredibly gullible at best, at worst insane, and that they, the Discreditor/Skeptic, are at the very least sufficiently less so.

In this particular instance, Klippenstein submits that a recovery program exists, though he refers to it as a UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) recovery program, implying that it is a program that collects downed vehicles manufactured by earthly foreign powers that are either remotely operated or perhaps controlled by artificial intelligence. In other words, not manufactured and piloted by a Non-Human Intelligence (NHI).

Given that Grusch believes what he believes as the result of his interviews with over 40 high-ranking intelligence officials, and that Klippenstein doesn’t doubt the man’s sincerity, this would seem to imply that Klippenstein believes Grusch was misled by these 40-plus members of the IC, which would further imply that he believes Grusch is the target of a disinformation campaign. I find it confusing, then, that when Saagar brought it up, Klippenstein also conceded that there is indeed sufficient evidence of Grusch being retaliated against after probing the issue of recovered NHI craft and finally bringing it public. After all, why would the IC badger Grusch into silence if he was being an unwitting mouthpiece for a cover story?

When pushed by Krystal on whether he thinks Grusch is lying or being misled, he also seems to suggest Grusch was misled, implying that the substance of Grusch’s claims is not a personal fault — which in effect seems to make the substance of his attack on Grusch’s character in his article irrelevant to the true matter at hand. When asked by Saagar whether his past PTSD and alcohol abuse disqualifies all he’s said since, his answer is confusing in its inconsistency.

“I don’t think it necessarily is disqualifying,” he confesses, yet then adds, “I think it might be. I mean, that’s kind of why I put it out. People can look at it and decide what they think.”

As perplexing as his viewpoint seems to be to me, I will now do as he suggests and “look at it” and tell you what I think.

According to Klippenstein, in the course of his surface investigation into Grusch he kept hearing how he was a “decorated war hero,” and while he freely admits that he doesn’t dispute that fact, it bothered him that, as he seemed to frame it, this served as a “be all, end all,” and little else was provided. His took issue with the fact that Grusch’s claims were being bolstered by his personal reputation and credibility, but he saw no efforts to truly vet the guy, and so made it his mission to do so. His first step was to speak with his contacts in the DOD and IC, he said, and they all suggested that Grusch was unreliable. Not wanting to just stick with those that he knew, he said, he then called out for tips, be they positive or negative, but those who reached out to him, Klippenstein emphasized, told him essentially the same general thing as contacts he knew.

The bulk of these contacts – his buddies as well as the newbies – didn’t technically “leak” him any information, however. They only gave him “bits and pieces,” he argues, “and the way in which that influences the reporting is a little bit more subtle than I think the discourse gives credit to. It’s not like they’re pointing you at one specific event. They give you a sense, and then you use that to go and use other methods to try and substantiate.” Ultimately, he sought to do so through legal FOIA requests.
In an interview with John Greenewald Jr., he elaborated on this a bit.

“It wasn’t one person,” he emphasizes. “There was, like, multiple people telling you something that’s kind of this vague thing. So I thought, what’s an evidence-based way that I can look at that? And I thought, oh, I guess I can do some local law enforcement searches. I just looked up his house in NEXIS and it gave me an address and I just did a search for a few years, and that was that.”

“If you want to say it was planted because I was talking to people and getting the rough impression of what he was like, I guess that’s true,” he said elsewhere.

Assuming, for the moment, that Klippenstein’s being honest, I can only conclude that he is simultaneously being naive as fuck. If Klippenstein already had connections in the DOD and IC, as he claims, those connections would undoubtedly be well aware that elements within the DOD and IC were trying to discredit or silence Grusch — efforts that Klippenstein himself said that there appears to be evidence for. So why would his connections stick their neck out to contradict the official narrative and the efforts of their superiors?

And as for him calling out for “positive or negative” tips beyond the scope of his familiar contacts, apparently via Twitter, which he claims he did to do his best to “cast as wide of a net” as he could “so that it’s not just reflective” of his circle of contacts and friends, is it really damning that he only received negative reviews of Grusch? Given the context provided above, why would anyone in the IC contact him in defense of the guy?

Klippenstein also states that he tries to talk with mid-level people, which he seems to believe works in his defense, as he believes they’re more honest than those at higher levels. Maybe the logic is just above my head here, but why would this be the case? Isn’t it conceivable, even likely, that such mid-level people would want to earn brownie points with their superiors to avoid retaliation, the kind of “administrative terrorism” Grusch referenced in the recent hearings, so as to at the very least maintain their positions — and perhaps even be promoted for their efforts?

Sagaar, as politely as he can, suggests Klippenstein might be a victim of selection bias, which I don’t think was out of line. However softly, he also dodges this allegation — or at least that was my potentially bias assessment.

Also, there was what I consider an incredibly important question that Saagar asked Klippenstein: why didn’t he quote these people? He responded that it was because he didn’t want to use innuendo, but to substantiate their claims, which also strikes me as a dodge. After all, he could have quoted these people with names — or even devoid of their names — and in addition provided evidence that substantiated their claims. Hell, doing so would also dissuade allegations that the article was a hit piece on behalf of himself or The Intercept more generally, and yet, as Saagar pointed out, he didn’t do this. And as formerly implied, this strikes me as naive at best, and at worst, dishonest.

Klippenstein also said his focus wasn’t on the PTSD, but the alcoholism, and reading his article clearly confirms this, but again, it overlooks the fact that alcohol is known to be a form of self-medication in those suffering from PTSD prior to getting treatment.

In any case, one wonders what possible relevance either PTSD or the related alcohol abuse might have given the fact that Grusch overcame it. Again, Grusch openly confessed to his issues, though in a general manner, during his original NewsNation interview, though it was cut from the edited version that aired due to the fact that it was deemed irrelevant to the issue at hand (which I still feel is the case) and only provided shortly ahead of Klippenstein’s article. If one chooses not to take Grusch’s word on the matter, however, there is also the fact that his authorities clearly felt confident enough in his recovery that his clearance wasn’t revoked.

When Sagaar pushed him on this point, Klippenstein feels that the fact that he retained his clearance is irrelevant, accusing the IC of essentially serving as a (gender-neutral) “boys club,” which is to say “senior-level people tend to look out for each other”.

This seems counterintuitive — contradictory, in fact — given the clear over-classification tendencies of the US government, which I imagine Klippenstein would agree with in other contexts. I must wonder, then: how would Killepenstien attempt to square this circle?

4. Klippenstein & The Intercept.

Digging up the backstory of Ken Klippenstein and The Intercept may seem irrelevant, and I accept that this may indeed be the case, but if so, digging up Grusch’s history with PTSD and alcohol abuse would also constitute irrelevancy. Given that Killepenstien and The Intercept do not seem to see Grusch’s past as irrelevant, however, but merely feel that in their act of exposing it, they are merely representing the other side of the coin, showing an opposing view, I feel free in providing just such an opposing view of Klippenstien himself and the media outlet he works for.

Let’s start with a question asked by Representative Andy Ogles (R-TN.) at about two hours and fifteen minutes into the hearing, a question that he directed at Fravor, Graves, as well as Grusch: “Is there any indication that the Department of Energy is involved in UAP data collection and housing?”

Fravor and Graves responded in the negative, as could be expected, given it would be beyond the scope of their knowledge. Grusch, however, replied, “I can’t confirm or deny that.” This is also expected, as such information would undoubtedly be classified.

“Could you do it in a secure setting?”

“Yes,” Grusch answered.

Of course, they were blocked from such a secure setting after the hearings, as later revealed, and given Grusch’s by-the-book adherence it’s unlikely that he has yet to reveal what he knows to Congress. In any case, his answer basically implicates the DOE, which is easy to imagine rubbed them the wrong way.

It was interesting to discover, then, sometime after reading Kevin Klippenstein’s article, to find that the journalist is the son of Stephen Killpenstein, a theoretical chemist for the DOE that works at the Argonne National Laboratory. On his profile page at Argonne, his research interests are described as follows:

“Developing theoretical methods for predicting the kinetics and dynamics of gas phase reactions and applying them to interesting problems in combustion, interstellar, and atmospheric chemistry. Our studies typically involve some combination of electronic structure calculations, transition state theory, trajectory simulations, and master equation modeling. One focus of our work involves exploring and improving the accuracy of such calculations. Another focus involves the use of such methods to understand novel experimental observations and to improve global models for the chemistry of complex environments. Recently, we have begun automating our computational procedures in order to utilize leadership class computing facilities for the in silico development of global chemical models.”

One could argue that Grouch’s answer to Ogles’s question, however vague given the open setting, could suggest a conflict of interest for Ken Klippenstein. It would also suggest that his contacts may be aware of his father’s position and that he may have had an interest in discrediting Grusch — and that due to this obvious association with his father, his “call for tips” may have attracted those who wished to discredit Grusch and inspired those who would have otherwise wanted to support him to avoid Ken Klippenstein like the goddamn plague.

Then there is the subject of the publication that provided his article, The Intercept, and its relation with whistleblowers – which, admittedly, in the beginning, was considerably warm, but then turned dreadfully cold.

Cuomo on his new show and Robbie on Rising both have taken the time to point out that The Intercept was an interesting avenue for them to go through to smear Grusch, as they had protected Snowden back in the day and based on that, one would expect them to side with whistleblowers. While it’s true they sided with Snowden, it’s important to realize that things can change — and in this case, they allegedly did.

Glenn Greenwald, who co-founded the Intercept in 2014 and was one of the journalists to whom Edward Snowden provided thousands of classified NSA documents revealing global surveillance programs, resigned from The Intercept in late 2020, claiming that the site was no longer carrying out the mission that was intended when it was founded, which was to amplify voices otherwise unheard in the context of American journalism. As recent as the 7th of August this year, he posted on the site formerly known as Twitter:

“If someone had told me the Intercept would be used to attack the current enemies of the CIA and Pentagon and, worse still, used to pressure Big Tech to censor dissent from CIA’s agenda, I’d have canceled it all. Why don’t you go write this in the NYT or MSNBC or Daily Beast?”

Unsurprisingly, The Intercept disagreed with his assessment, as sharply articulated in a statement by their editor-in-chief, Betsy Reed, which reads, in part:

“The narrative [Greenwald] presents about his departure is teeming with distortions and inaccuracies – all of them designed to make him appear a victim, rather than a grown person throwing a tantrum.”

In the end, it’s all “he said, she said,” I suppose.

To provide what could potentially be an additional reason for suspicion, however, there is the timeline of events leading up to the article. The aforementioned Congressional hearings took place on June 26th, with Klippenstein making his FOIA request only four days later, on the 30th.

Four days: in which time Klippenstein implied he had spoken to his familiar contacts, spread a net to receive tips outside his comfort zone, and ultimately received a “mosaic” of general suggestions as to where he should look to substantiate their claims.

The FOIA request was received and responded to by August 1st, where they informed him it was being forwarded to the Leesburg Police Department in Virginia. FOIA requires that an agency gets back to whoever sent the request within 20 business days after receiving it, and perhaps the speedy response is due to the fact that this FOIA request was directed at the police rather than, say, the CIA, but agencies (at least with respect to UFO material) seem to delay responding far beyond the legal limits (without any consequence), so it may — and I repeat, with emphasis: may — be suspicious that the process was so swift in this case.

5. Of Medical Records & FOIA Requests.

An issue that I feel must be delved into is The Intercept’s call to Grusch ahead of the article’s publication, in which they allegedly asked about his medical records, and Grusch’s subsequent call to the police department, where he asked if any relevant FOIA requests and responses had taken place, and they denied any had, despite the article providing evidence that they had indeed received and responded to such FOIA requests.

With respect to all of this, there are, so far as I can see, only four possibilities.

First, Grusch and Coulthart lied – potentially about the nature of The Intercept’s call, but certainly about the results of Grusch’s subsequent call to the police. I honestly doubt this possibility, as they had to have known it would come out in short order that they were bullshitting and that this fact would subsequently serve to discredit them. In other words, this would be incredibly stupid on their behalf, and both seem rather intelligent.

The second possibility is that Killpenstein is lying, which would be as dumb a suggestion in my eyes as the former suggestion. Not only would this require him to forge all the FOIA documents provided in his article, but these would almost certainly be confirmed to be forgeries once the police department was contacted.

There are two remaining possibilities, however. The third is that Grusch was misinformed, which is say he was unintentionally fed false information by the sheriff’s office, a hypothesis Cuomo himself proposed. This is certainly possible, and one could make the argument that given the nature of bureaucracies, it might even be elevated to the most probable explanation. It may very well be.

There is one remaining possibility, however, and it removes that assumed innocence. This is that Grusch was fed disinformation, which is to say he was intentionally fed false information, most immediately by The Intercept, and then by the police department, perhaps in both cases at the behest of the IC. Is this a paranoid suspicion? One’s natural inclination would be to say yes, it certainly is, but Grusch has already claimed – and most recently, under oath, before Congress and the public – that he was a victim of reprisals, both professionally and personally, and this would certainly resonate with those previous allegations and be well within the power of those who’s power he seems to be threatening.

Despite this, in the days following the article, Klippenstein wasn’t attacked and The Intercept was attacked at best minimally, with the true target of critique and angst directed at the Powers That Be, presumably operating, pulling strings Behind the Scenes in at best an unethical, and at worst illegal, manner.

At the end of the day, I still fail to see how Grusch speaking on behalf of over forty high-ranking officials working in a decades-old program focused on the retrieval and reverse-engineering of UFOs and disinforming the public about the subject has anything to do with the understandably traumatic issues he dealt with after returning home from war – particularly given his triumph over that dark period in his life.

David Grusch and the Secrets of the UFO Retrieval Program.

Mulder: Right? Who are you to say what’s right?
Cancer Man: Who are you? If people were to know of the things that I know, it would all fall apart.”
– “One Breath,” The X-Files.

“Because a body of men, holding themselves accountable to nobody, ought not to be trusted by anybody.”
– “The Rights of Man,” Thomas Paine.

“Stand on my soapbox
and speak my own peace.
Whatever you may think,
it’s real.”
– “Silenced,” Mudvayne.

On June 5th, 2023, a bombshell article was published in The Debrief. Written by Leslie Kean and Ralph Blumenthal, it was entitled, “Intelligence Officials Say U.S. Has Retrieved Craft of Non-Human Origin.” Shortly thereafter, on NewsNation, investigative journalist Ross Coulthart had an interview with the subject of that article, one David Grusch, where even more was revealed, and then Grusch had another interview with Gaël Lombart in the French newspaper, Le Parisien on June 7th.

Thus far, these are the only three direct public sources for data stemming from Grusch himself.

Major news outlets in the US were slow to pick up on the story, which honestly didn’t surprise me in the least, yet I confess I still felt profoundly disappointed. After all, given the apparent signs of newfound openness and transparency the Navy, at the very least, seems to have developed since the bombshell article in the New York Times on December 16, 2017 – the article entitled “Glowing Auras and ‘Black Money’: The Pentagon’s Mysterious U.F.O. Program,” which was written not only by Helene Cooper, but also Ralph Blumenthal and Leslie Kean, the last two mentioned, of course, being the authors of the more recent article in The Debrief – I had hoped, at the very least, prompt coverage of his claims.

No such luck.

So let us start at the top, namely: who the bloody hell is this Grusch, and why is he apparently so important?

1. The Revelations of Grusch.

Back in 1987, in the city of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, the presently 36-year-old David Charles Grusch was born. He explained that given that he both had no money for college and always felt the desire to be part of something greater than himself, he joined the US Air Force. In 2005, he went to college for physics on an Air Force scholarship and in 2009 began his military career, where he was a decorated combat officer for his service in Afghanistan, though he was evidently also stationed in other places too hush-hush for him to mention. He later began his civilian service at the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) as a GS-15 civilian and took on the role of Senior Intelligence Officer. This was in 2016, the same year he began serving as Senior Intelligence Capabilities Integration Officer for the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA).

From 2019 to 2021, he served as the NRO’s representative to the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force (UAPTF) in the role of Senior Technical Advisor for Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Analysis/Trans-Medium Issues. Between late 2021 to July 2022, he served as the NGA’s representative to the UAPTF as its co-leadership for UAP analysis. In other words, from 2019 to 2022, his job was investigating the UAP subject, which involved holding extensive, detailed interviews with many high-level senior and former intelligence officials, some of whom he stated he had known for his entire career. By his own admission, he had entered into the subject of UFOs as an ardent skeptic, coming at the issue as “a hard-core physics guy” with “a high bullshit factor,” and so red flags were raised and began waving in what he initially took to be the mighty winds of a lot of hot air when what many of them began to tell him exceeded his boggle threshold.

Initially, he assumed he was likely being fed disinformation for the purposes of covering up some other program, so as he went on, he was very methodical, ensuring he interviewed people who weren’t associated with one another. In the end, however – based on the credentials of the people who confided in him, their verbal testimonies, and the extremely specific details regarding how it all worked, as well as the sensitive documents, photographs, and foreign intelligence they provided him for research and analysis – he ultimately had to accept that what they were collectively telling him was true.

So what did the sources he interviewed tell him that was so damn unbelievable?

Well, they alleged that they had been or were currently directly involved with a broad, decades-old UFO retrieval program that has shielded its efforts within Special Access Programs (SAPs) nested within several different agencies of the US Government. Though his contacts named the overarching program, which he had never heard of before, he simply calls it The Program, and they alleged that it involves the US government (specifically elements of the intelligence community), its allies (other members of the Five Eyes alliance, which is to say Canada, the UK, Australia, and New Zealand), and a handful of defense contractors. The Program deals with the retrieval of landed craft, crashed craft, and fragments of craft that derive from “Non-Human Intelligences” (NHIs) and the subsequent efforts to reverse-engineer and replicate their technology. In conjunction with these retrieval operations, bodies of NHIs have also been recovered, and he suggests that there may even be reason to suspect that meetings and even agreements between members of The Program and NHI have occurred.

The Program continues to this day, Grusch says, and he knows of the particular people involved, both current and former – and presumably this list exceeds those he interviewed. In addition, our geopolitical rivals have also encountered NHI and their technology, have developed similar retrieval programs, and members of The Program have been engaging in a multi-decade cold war with them in efforts to successfully reverse-engineer and replicate the technology. Like the US, he says, they have been secretly exploiting what they’ve learned for military purposes.

Grusch’s contacts went on to express to him their concerns regarding a long list of illicit, unethical, and “un-American” behavior on the part of The Program, with the most immediate and clear crime being that members of The Program were maintaining the secrecy, at least in part, in a deliberate effort to dodge Congressional oversight. In this context of crimes, however, he also specifically mentions “illegal contracting against the Federal Acquisition Regulations” as well as “the suppression of information across a qualified industrial base and academia” as well as a broad disinformation campaign targeting the public. Other crimes, such as murder, may have been committed in service of maintaining secrecy as well.

2) Getting in the Weeds.

I’d like to pause here in the narrative to detail some of what he’s revealed publicly through The Debrief, NewsNation, and Le Parisien, as I feel they deserve some more elaboration — and, honestly, I feel compelled to provide some commentary as well.

At some point in the NewsNation interview, as I imagine he had to, Coulthart brought up one of the typical go-to arguments Discreditors and Skeptics default to when charges of a conspiracy in this area are made, which is that “the government can’t keep secrets,” and certainly not secrets that had to have been held for what is closely approximating a century. One person I knew, however jokingly, once told me that the government couldn’t successfully organize screwing in a light bulb, much less maintain a cover-up of such magnitude on the order of countless decades. These Skeptics and Discreditors often overlook at least three major factors in my opinion, and this is despite the fact that some of these people have been in the military themselves.

First, we often think of the government as a unified, singular beast, when in fact it is anything but. Different aspects of the government may be far better at keeping secrets than others, and I don’t think it’s a leap to assume that the intelligence community would likely be the unrivaled masters of conspiracies and cover-ups. It’s also a fact that the nature of the secrecy system within the US government undoubtedly plays a role, specifically in the level of classification and the degree of compartmentalization.

And here, I feel, I should add some context.

To the best of my understanding, government secrecy is organized by means of both classification and compartmentalization – two forms of secrecy that, though interwoven, should be distinguished. Visually, I’ve always imagined this secrecy as a whole as constituting a sort of grid, with the horizontal lines representing classification and the vertical ones representing compartmentalization.

A system of classification limits the dissemination of information to categories of individuals who have achieved a certain level of clearance. Since the end of WWII, for instance, the classification system in the US government is said to have three levels: Confidential, Secret, and Top Secret.

A system of compartmentalization, on the other hand – also known as ”codeword-classified information” – further limits the dissemination of information to specific individuals on a need-to-know basis. This means that while all compartmentalized information is classified, very little classified information is compartmentalized and that people with the lowest classification may operate in a compartment to which someone with the highest security clearance doesn’t have access. On the surface, this may seem stupid, but the point of such compartmentalization is pretty straightforward: if people only know as much classified information that is required for them to execute the specific task or mission to which they’ve been assigned — if such data is only disseminated on a “need-to-know” basis, in other words — the likelihood that information vital to national security will leak and fall into the hands of any adversaries is reduced considerably.

Compartmentalized information, as implied by its aforementioned alternative title, is designated not only a classification but a codeword – for instance, “Top Secret: Ultra.” Such compartmentalized programs are often referred to as the aforementioned SAPs and the information involved as Sensitive Compartmentalized Information (SCI). There may be additional details involved here, and for all I know I have gotten particular details wrong, but this is as far as my feeble mind has brought me thus far.

In any case, the ways in which compartmentalization functions was, in my opinion, best expressed by Representative Tim Burchett (R-TN 2nd District) in the midst of being interviewed by sci-fi writer and podcaster John Michael Goldier on the July 2nd episode of his podcast, Event Horizon – the details of which I will cover later. As for now, I’d like to reference an anecdote he offered during their conversation.

Burchett explained that when he ran for office, he largely did so by going from door to door. As he was doing this in West Knoxville, he came upon a house that sported an American flag, which in his experience strongly suggested that the resident was a veteran. So when an elderly gentleman answered the door, he asked, and with some subtle signs of shame, the old man confessed that he hadn’t served, but that he had worked at Oak Ridge National Laboratories in Tennessee, which Burchett was well aware had helped construct the atomic bomb that had led the US to win the Second World War. Burchett told him that his father was in Okinawa when they dropped the bomb and that if he was alive today, he’d hug him, as given his participation, his father didn’t need to help invade Japan.

He then asked the guy what he did at Oak Ridge, and this was where the story got interesting – and relevant to the current subject. During the war, both the old man and his wife – likely just his girlfriend at the time – worked at Oak Ridge, right down the hall from one another, but neither knew what they were working on or why. It was only far later that they realized that while he was working on the switch, she was busy working on the fuse, though both had been unknowingly working on the epic bomb, and that their shared ignorance was due to the strict compartmentalization imposed by the Manhattan Project.

The reason Burchett offered this anecdote was that he thinks this may be the case with the reverse-engineering aspect of the UFO retrieval program: people may be subjecting certain parts of crashed craft to analysis without having the faintest clue as to what the entirety of The Project entails. Going even further, he suggests that some people may be working on staged projects because The Powers That Be know they’re liable to leak the information – in reality, disinformation – which will either throw UFO researchers off the track or ultimately be revealed to be erroneous, thereby discrediting not only that individual, but the subject as a whole in the eyes of many.

The second thing Skeptics and Discreditors often overlook is, assuming some aspects of our government are indeed good at keeping secrets, you naturally wouldn’t know about them — you would only know of those secrets which were ultimately declassified or exposed by whistleblowers and then confirmed. When confronted by Coulthart with the allegation that “the government can’t keep secrets,” after all, Grusch, who has been an intelligence agent for fourteen years, didn’t hesitate shooting that notion down.

“Well, I’ve certainly been the recipient of a lot of US government secrets and I can tell you they’ve never seen the light of day,” he said. “That’s for sure.”

Third, to say that certain aspects of our government are good at keeping secrets doesn’t necessarily mean that there aren’t leaks, just that such leaks are not or cannot be proven to have real substance. For instance, my typical response to the allegation that “the government can’t keep secrets” is that despite the fact that I’ve only worked in shit jobs in my life, mostly in food service – supermarkets, grocery stores, but by and large, fast food – I have nonetheless witnessed more than one conspiracy, and if it can happen in the context of a fast food franchise and be successful, it’s not a leap to assume it happens at higher levels of society. One might reasonably counter that conspiracies at my level have not been successful given I know about them, and on the surface that seems like a legitimate argument, but the success of a conspiracy isn’t so much whether or not people outside the conspiracy know about it, but whether they can successfully – or for that matter, even have the guts to try – and prove the legitimacy of the conspiracy in question, to take any real action and bring the perpetrators to justice. In the aforementioned fast food conspiracies, those who knew judged such efforts to be far more trouble than they were worth, and that’s the point. I never blew the whistle, nor did those who confided in me, but they did occasionally gossip about the details in whispers.

This relates to the UFO conspiracy intimately. After all, there have been leaks of such a conspiracy for decades, but many would just dismiss them as rumors.

This brings us to the fourth fact so often overlooked, and that is that people who are good at keeping secrets realize with utmost clarity that leaks are going to occur and that they cannot prevent them entirely. Given their awareness of this fact, what can they do, if they can’t plug the leaks? For one thing, they can bribe, intimidate, or eliminate the disseminators of such leaks, and tales in UFO circles have espoused this for decades. People have retracted their allegations, at times later confessing that they had been intimidated with reprisals, even threatened with their lives or, worse, the lives of those that they love. There are suggestions that many have been bribed, and others have died in, shall we say, mysterious circumstances.

This is merely the reactive means by which the keepers of secrets seek to plug or neutralize the predictable leaks, however, and there is a more proactive way of dealing with them. This brings us to the deliberate dissemination of disinformation, of muddying those leaks with utter bullshit or even revealing bullshit within which reside a few golden peanuts of truth — which I personally feel has been one of their most successful techniques with respect to maintaining secrecy. Grusch spoke on this point to NewsNation as well.

“I guess ostensibly this has leaked like a sieve for decades,” he said, “but it was a very sophisticated disinformation campaign where they have allowed some of the truth to come out through some of their trade crafts. But they’ve disenfranchised people, they’ve stigmatized it, they’ve made it this totally wacky thing to talk about so anybody who may come forward with that kind of information is looked like a total tinfoil hat guy because it’s a perfect amalgamation of disinformation to just make it look crazy.”

Summarizing it elsewhere, he says that “there’s a sophisticated disinformation campaign targeting the US populace which is extremely unethical and immoral.”

This disinformation may come in another form, at a deeper level, however, which brings us to the recommendations of the Robertson Panel. After the Washington flap of 1952, in which UFOs flew over the capital on two successive weekends in July and inspired a strong public reaction, the CIA commissioned a panel headed by HP Robertson, which took place between the 14th and 18th of January, 1953. The ultimately declassified version of their report, known in UFO circles as the Durant Report, concluded that while UFOs themselves weren’t a direct threat to national security, UFO reports could overwhelm military channels and pose a threat in that sense. They then recommended a public “training and educational program” aimed at the subject of UFOs to discredit it and reduce public interest and concern and consequently minimize UFO Reports. From a portion of the report:

“The Panel’s concept of a broad educational program integrating efforts of all concerned agencies was that it should have two major aims: training and “debunking.” The training aim would result in proper recognition of unusually illuminated objects (e.g., balloons, aircraft reflections) as well as natural phenomena (meteors, fireballs, mirages, noctilucent clouds). … The “debunking” aim would result in reduction in public interest in “flying saucers” which today evokes a strong psychological reaction. This education could be accomplished by mass media such as television, motion pictures, and popular articles. Basis of such education would be actual case histories which had been puzzling at first but later explained. As in the case of conjuring tricks, there is much less stimulation if the “secret” is known. Such a program should tend to reduce the current gullibility of the public and consequently their susceptibility to clever hostile propaganda.”

Though these suggestions were never officially executed, there is nonetheless a strong suggestion they were, and that the true “clever hostile propaganda” was, in fact, this “training and educational” program itself, which succeeded in making the subject seem utterly ridiculous in the eyes of the public and inspired ridicule towards and silence of any potential UFO witnesses, abductees, or insiders inspired to blow the whistle. And it still has an effect – many whistleblowers remain anonymous, and the legitimacy of many of the leaked documents provided are still contested – but its effect does seem to be lessening.

So again, allegations of a UFO conspiracy have been made for decades, but even with respect to Those in the Know who want this to come out, how do you get others to take it seriously, and even then, how do you prove it?

For decades the efforts of many to bring a collective sense and official declaration of legitimacy to even the surface aspect of the UFO phenomenon seemed a Herculean feat. Then came that initial New York Times article that ultimately led to the establishment of UAPTF – which Grusch worked for, and where he gained his dire revelations – and which has since reincarnated into the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).

I must confess, I was pleasantly surprised by this sudden turn of events, though I knew well enough not to get my hopes up, striving to sustain a cautious and critical kind of optimism. Grusch clearly shares my skepticism in this regard, for however much hope some of us may have naively felt when the Navy confessed the leaked videos of their encounters with UAP were true unknowns, he assures us that this admission – and the subsequent establishment of the UAPTF and then the AARO – is not the new age of government transparency regarding the subject that we might believe it to be. The UAP videos that have been released, he insists, are just the tip of the iceberg (which I believe Elizondo has also said), and many videos in their possession could be declassified and released. And he finds it disturbing from a transparency perspective that they have not been. There are more concerning videos, he said, that left him with a lot of questions.

Most concerning of all, however, had to have been the briefings he was given regarding a decades-old UFO retrieval program.

The moment I learned of this, I was of course curious as to which specific UFO crash-retrievals Grusch would be willing or legally able to stand behind, as many such cases have been floating around in the UFO community for decades. I have a short list of those I find most credible – Roswell, New Mexico, in July of 1947; Kecksburg, Pennsylvania, on December 9, 1965; Virginha, Brazil, in January of 1996 – and I was eager to see if he mentioned any of them. The only recovery Grusch specifically detailed, however – to both NewsNation and the French paper – was the oldest case he had been briefed on, and evidently, the only one he was cleared to talk about. It dealt with the recovery of a crashed and damaged bell-shaped craft, roughly ten meters in size, in Magenta, Italy, in 1933. The Italian military, under the rule of World War II Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, retrieved it and moved it to a secure air base in the country. Pope Pius XII ultimately gave a tip to the US government and it was subsequently recovered by agents of the US Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in 1944.

Two or three years later, of course, after the end of the Second World War, there was the now-infamous Roswell Incident, where a crashed craft and debris were allegedly collected in the area around Roswell, New Mexico, in early July of 1947. While Grusch spoke of Roswell, he didn’t technically confirm it, save through implication. More specifically, he critiqued the most recent government explanations for the incident in Roswell, New Mexico.

“That analysis they did was a total hack job,” he said. “Anybody with analytical skills, if you read it, you can deduce that they’re conflating multiple situations with crash test dummies and Mogul balloons and they’re just saying that the townsfolk who personally witnessed it were totally imagining things. They concocted that whole report just to disinform.”

While retrievals of UFO crashes are certainly interesting, this turns out to be the least interesting aspect of what Grusch said regarding these retrieval operations, as he specifically explained that the UFO retrieval program dealt with recovering not just fragments of craft and crashed craft, but also in-tact, landed craft – ones that had presumably been abandoned.

Though I’ve speculated and written about it for years, I believe it was in my blog post regarding the relatively recent shoot-downs of “balloons” that I first mentioned online my working hypothesis that most if not all of these UFO crashes were, in fact, staged by the intelligence behind the phenomenon – by the NHI, to use Grusch’s handy, neutral acronym – for the purposes of inspiring divisions amongst the human populace. Global powers would struggle for decades to replicate them, engaging in a secret cold war, all the while keeping their respective populations in the dark. It’s the old, Machevellian, divide-and-conquer technique, I hypothesized: break the power of an adversary, or potential adversary, into smaller pieces and get them working against one another so that they’re far less likely to band together into a unified force against you, their common enemy. It also diverts their attention from your activities behind the scenes.

That the retrieval program would have also acquired landed and perfectly functional craft only reinforces my suspicions, though this isn’t the first time I’ve heard of such allegations. In the periods in which I’ve found myself believing in Bob Lazar’s claims, for instance, I remember him describing that lone occasion in which he saw all nine of the craft being studied at S-4, where he allegedly worked for a short time in the late 1980s, and he described seeing one that looked as if a projectile had blasted through it. While the nature of that particular craft certainly provoked questions in my mind – questions that arose again recently when Grusch referenced “certain techniques” that may have even been used to bring down such craft deliberately – far more intriguing were the eight other crafts that were, so far as his description of that moment implies, entirely undamaged. Whether or not one trusts Lazar’s claims, to hear of similar details from Grusch, who we know is who he claims to be, should give one pause, and make one consider the potential motivations of the NHI.

When it comes to the subject of the non-human origin of the craft, however, Coulthart asked Grusch how his contacts can be so sure. In response, Grusch references “vehicle morphologies” and the “unique atomic arrangements and radiological signatures” of the materials he was briefed on. The craft and the materials out of which they were constructed were engineered in a sophisticated manner, he says, and “certainly not by humans.”

While the nature of the crafts itself certainly indicated the crafts were of unearthly origin, the dead bodies of NHIs he later mentioned were sometimes found in conjunction with the crashed craft, I must imagine, undoubtedly also played a role in that determination. He has seen photos and has read some intriguing reports regarding the entities, he says, and prefers to refer to them as NHIs due to the fact that they don’t have sufficient data (or, at the very least, he wasn’t briefed on such data) to confidently nail down their origin. Turning to his physics background, he speculates that they could derive from higher spatial dimensions, a parallel universe essentially superimposed over our own. While he doesn’t state it specifically, the language he uses indicates he was subtly referencing the additional possibility that they could be time travelers. He emphasizes this is only speculation, however, and ends by stating that at the very least we are dealing with an intelligent, non-human intelligence that is “potentially extraterrestrial.”

Unlike Stephen Greer, who speaks as if all NHIs are benevolent space brothers and sisters, Grusch also makes it clear that not all of them are benevolent from the human perspective. He explains how it’s a logical fallacy to assume that simply because they represent an advanced, non-human intelligence they would be kind – a perspective I’ve cradled myself for some time and doesn’t seem to be embraced by enough people in the UFO field, in my opinion. Sociopaths, psychopaths, and serial killers are often highly intelligent, after all, providing sufficient evidence that even within our own species higher intelligence doesn’t necessarily suggest a greater degree of empathy and compassion.

This isn’t merely speculation on his part, either, at least according to him, as he references having been provided evidence of what he at one point calls “malevolent activity,” though says he can’t “get into the specifics, because that would reveal certain US classified operations,” which I must say, is ominous as fuck. While there he makes absolutely no references to the phenomenon of alien abduction, this immediately makes me think of it, and most specifically some cases in David Paulides’s book series, Missing 411, that may suggest some abductees are returned dead or never returned at all. Animal mutilations also come to mind.

The malevolence doesn’t stop with NHIs, however, but extends to those involved in the recovery and reverse-engineering program itself. “At the very least, I saw substantive evidence of white collar crime was committed,” he says, and among the members of the program that he’s talked to, there was grave suspicion and concerns that people had been murdered over the years in the service of the program and the secrecy surrounding it. “Yeah, unfortunately, I’ve heard some very un-American things that I don’t want to repeat right now,” he says at one point.

Speaking of what patriots such as himself would undoubtedly regard as “un-American things,” this seems like a good point to mention his unnerving statement regarding the “agreements” he referenced in an internal document he wrote regarding the discoveries he made – “agreements,” he wrote, “that risk putting our future in jeopardy.” In the NewsNation interview, when Coulthart pushed him on the question as to whether or not there had been agreements made between our human leaders (specifically the US government) and the NHI, he only offered cautiously constructed, incredibly ominous responses. It was clear that this was not a particular avenue of the subject that he was eager to get into.

“That’s the kind of information that I hope national leadership will get to the bottom of,” he said at one point, and then, later: “I think that’s a question that I would like to know of all the details of as well.”

I explored this notion of “agreements” between NHIs and aspects of the US government in my blog post Gray Aliens: Origins and Objectives. However passionate I was about exploring the subject matter I provided in the post (and however weird my seemingly paranormal experience one evening while taking notes on the subject), it rather embarrassed me as I put it together, as I considered the level of conspiracy here to be nearly the darkest of the dark, and yet the general notion struck me as entirely probable given everything else I’d considered quite likely to be true. I was almost happy to find discrepancies in the associated accounts of such meetings and agreements, as it meant I had to throw this in my “gray basket” between truth and bullshit, though I knew if such a meeting and agreement did take place the Powers That Be would undoubtedly muddy the leaks referencing it with disinformation to throw anyone off the trail, as explained earlier.

3. Grusch’s War for Disclosure.

After these revelations, as was his duty as a member of the UAPTF — and acceptable, given his broad clearance — Grusch ultimately pressed to gain direct access to The Program.

He was denied.

He subsequently filed a whistleblower complaint with the Intelligence Community Inspector General (ICIG), Thomas A. Monheim, in June of 2021, that elements of the intelligence community were hiding UFO data for the explicit purpose of avoiding Congressional oversight. The following month, he confidentially provided the Department of Defense (DOD) Inspector General (IG), one Sean O’Donnell, with the aforementioned UFO-related classified material he had amassed.

Shortly thereafter, Grusch’s problems began.

While he made no accusations that the IG’s office made improper disclosures, what followed did lead him to the strong suspicion that individuals or entities within the DOD and intelligence community learned of his identity and testimony, as he subsequently experienced what he described as “reprisals,” which involved denial, delay, cancellation, and obstruction of his compartmentalized accesses to other elements in the intelligence community, allegations of misconduct, and apparently threats on his life, as well as other forms of threat and retaliation that he would not detail publically at this time, citing an ongoing investigation, though he did tell the French newspaper he may be able to within a few months.

In light of this, if I understand all this correctly and I have the timeline right, what he did next was a very intelligent move.

Throughout his time in the government, Grusch apparently helped prepare countless briefs for Congress regarding the UAP subject, but perhaps none of them were as important as his assistance in early 2022 with respect to the National Defense Authorization Act of 2023 (FY2023 NDAA). It required the military to review UFO sightings dating back to 1945 and provided detailed procedures regarding how UFO sightings and encounters should be reported, and – perhaps not coincidentally – provided whistleblower protections, stating that any individual with relevant data regarding UFOs, regardless of any former NDAs, has the right to inform Congress on the matter, and without retaliation.

Then, in February of 2022, Grusch got a lawyer – namely one Charles McCullough III, who was not only the senior partner of the Compass Rose Legal Group in Washington but had also been the first ever Inspector General of the Intelligence Community (IGIC). In May, McCullough filed a “Disclosure of Urgent Concern(s); Complaint of Reprisal” on Grusch’s behalf with Thomas Monheim, the current IGIC, regarding his accusation that classified data had been concealed from ARRO and Congress by elements of the intelligence community for the explicit purpose of avoiding Congressional oversight. And this was provided by Grusch, it should be emphasized, under oath. Though I’m skipping ahead a bit, it’s important to mention here that a little over a year later, in June of 2023, after the firm had “successfully concluded its representation” of Grusch and after Grusch had brought his specific claims public, the law firm clarified that Grusch did not offer details regarding the classified data. In their words:

“The whistleblower disclosure did not speak to the specifics of the alleged classified information that Mr. Grusch has now publicly characterized, and the substance of that information has always been outside of the scope of Compass Rose’s representation. Compass Rose took no position and takes no position on the contents of the withheld information. The ICIG found Mr. Grusch’s assertion that information was inappropriately concealed from Congress to be urgent and credible in response to the filed disclosure. Compass Rose brought this matter to the ICIG’s attention through lawful channels and successfully defended Mr. Grusch against retaliation.”

In other words, Grusch did everything above board, and legally, much unlike any former “whistleblower” I’m aware of, and I’m currently of the opinion that he did it in this way because (much unlike myself at this point in my life) he still believes in the system, and he feels that if he’s going after The Program principally because they’re committing criminal acts, he has no desire to become a criminal himself in his efforts to disclose their crimes. It’s also likely that he doesn’t want distractions from the central issue he’s fighting for, as was the case with NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, who provided classified data on an insidious program to the media illegally – and where the government and media spotlight was more focused on whether he constituted a traitor or a hero than any of the disturbing revelations he provided.

I should mention here that I’m not condemning Snowden. I’m one who truly believes he’s a hero, and that he made a sacrifice in providing this information to the public, but while I don’t share the apparent patriotic and legal convictions Grusch clearly seems to have, I have both an admiration for his apparent strategy and how he’s followed through with it up to this point.

Anyway, a month following his whistleblower disclosure, in July 2022, as suggested in the previously provided quotation from Compass Rose, the current ICIG – after having interviewed not only Grusch himself (during which he presumably provided details not provided to the firm), and not only the subjects he was speaking on behalf of, but other subjects he doesn’t even know of – found his complaint “credible and urgent.”

Why is this important? As I’ve heard it explained, the ICIG is essentially in the role of serving as an “internal cop” whose duty it is to ensure that the entire intelligence community – and apparently there are 18 separate intelligence agencies – are all operating legally. And the ICIG, after hearing Grusch’s testimony as well as others, who actually have first-hand knowledge of this illegal program, found his complaint, again, “credible and urgent.”

As a consequence of the ICIG’s determination, a whistleblower reprisal investigation began. A summary was then swiftly provided to the Director of National Intelligence, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, as well as the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. According to The Debrief, this was also when Grusch began talking in closed-door sessions to the staff of Congressional intelligence committees. Unfortunately, he couldn’t reveal all he knew to them, he claimed, as they didn’t have the “required clearances,” which to me seems odd, given their job is to provide oversight for such things.

Then, on December 23, 2022, Biden signed the aforementioned FY2023 NDAA into law.

In April of 2023, in preparation for his public interviews, Grusch maintained his habit of adhering to the law by providing the Defense Office of Prepublication and Security Review at the Department of Defense (DOPSR) with all data he intended to disclose. As should be suggested by its title, the purpose of this office is to review material that Those in the Know wish to express – be the medium in question a book, an article, or shit they desire to discuss publicly, as in the context of an interview – and assess whether or not any elements of that material should be withheld for reasons of national security. Well, they looked over the material he provided and (presumably) marked some aspects of it as classified – which is to say, shit he couldn’t say legally, as expressed in certain points in his NewsNation interview – and other aspects of that data they gave the official thumbs-up and stamp of approval. And so everything in the article, ultimately published in The Debrief for reasons formerly explained – and, presumably, the NewsNation interview – was “cleared for publication” on the 4th and 6th of April.

“I’m still bound by my confidentiality agreement with the US government, and I cannot discuss still-classified information,” he told the French newspaper. “So I can speak publicly, in a general sense, but the details about material recoveries are very limited until they are declassified.”

Many have dismissed all that he’s said on account of the fact that he got “permission” before coming forward publicly with all that he has said. Honest Skeptics as well as the usual line of impassioned Discreditors have been quick to assume that because he got the thumbs-up this means all that he has revealed to the public thus far isn’t considered “protected information,” and that if that’s the case it clearly means that everything he said is bullshit, as obviously the things he spoke about would be considered “protected information” if they were indeed true.

Not necessarily.

I’m no lawyer, obviously, but I think people operating under this assumption should take some time to reflect on his central accusation here, namely that elements in the intelligence community have intentionally and illegally concealed information regarding a long-standing and far-reaching program dealing with the retrieval of NHI craft and bodies for the explicit purpose of avoiding Congressional oversight.

Given that The Program, as Grusch has evidently called it, is illegal, even the most extreme aspects of the data he provided would not technically or necessarily be recognized as classified or compartmentalized within the legal context, and so, as a consequence, he would be free to talk about it. Despite this, as revealed by the article and interview, he was clearly tight-lipped in many respects. Even Colhart referenced this in the interview. Much of this may be a consequence of the results of the DOPSR, yes – perhaps some aspects of what he could say were legal and classified or would be classified if they were later deemed to be legal, and in any case would threaten our national security – but it may also be the result of his own discretion as an impassioned patriot. After all, as he said in the NewsNation interview, he believes the subject should be handled much as the subject of atomic weapons and nuclear physics are handled, which is to say: the government acknowledges the program, and we’re all well aware that nuclear weapons exist, and nuclear physics is unclassified. At the same time, you don’t get to know the designs for nuclear weapons.

That’s his approach to the subject – and to bring up Stanton Friedman again, this seems to approximate his approach to the subject as well: the humans of planet Earth deserve to know that NHIs exist, what their biology is, and they deserve to know we have their bodies and advanced craft. And, yes, to step out of the analogy for a moment, they deserve to know what egregious crimes have been committed in the efforts to conceal this secret and glean further information. Nonetheless, some things should still be kept under wraps. And I think, given the context, that this sufficiently explains what he revealed and didn’t reveal in the article and interview: what he thinks, given sufficient Congressional oversight, we have a right to know, and what he thinks, for reasons of national security, we ought not to. It’s certainly consistent with his character as it has been displayed in both the article and interview.

In any case, on April 7th, the day after DOPSR cleared what he intended to say for publication, Grusch resigned from the NGA, as he expressed it, for the purpose of going public on this issue in efforts to push not only for increased collective awareness but for greater government accountability.

“I have more information that I will publish later,” he told the French newspaper. “I want to be an opinion leader on this subject. This year, I will launch a non-profit foundation to help the scientific community initiate protocols on this subject, from undergraduate students to graduates. It would be helpful because there are no secrets in the academic system. It would allow us to finally look at these things scientifically.”

He was then interviewed by Leslie Kean and Ralph Blumenthal for their article, which The New York Times refused to publish, but which both Politico and The Washington Post had an interest in, though they wanted more time to gather more facts and add more context. On May 26, 2023, attorney Daniel Sheehan leaked Grusch’s name, however, which sent them into a state of hyperdrive. Kean and Blumenthal felt it was important to get this out before they lost control of the story. Ultimately, this is what prompted them to publish their article in The Debrief on June 5. On NewsNation, they initially provided but a small portion of the interview award-winning investigative journalist Ross Coulthart had with Grusch, which I believe aired on the same day, with the entire interview – or a longer version of it, at the very least – airing on June 7th, which revealed a wealth of additional information.

In response to Grusch’s testimony, DOD spokesperson Sue Gough said, on June 5th, said that: “To date, AARO has not discovered any verifiable information to substantiate claims that any programs regarding the possession or reverse-engineering of extraterrestrial materials have existed in the past or exist currently.”

This, of course, fits very well given Grusch’s claims that the UAPTF, the former incarnation of ARRO, was denied access to these programs. The circumstances surrounding ARRO and its inability to “discover any verifiable claims” regarding what Grusch revealed was more fully detailed two days later by journalist Micheal Shellenberger, who on June 7th published his article, “US Has 12 or More Alien Spacecraft, Say Military And Intelligence Contractors” on substack. This article was subsequently covered on Breaking Points as well as Rising, where they actually had an interview with Shellenberger, and where he provided additional details fed to him by his own sources.

As Shellenberger’s sources point out, ARRO operates under Title 10 authority, whereas the intelligence community operates under Title 50, so ARRO doesn’t even have the authority to access such programs – so of course they can’t verify it, and it doesn’t help matters that they don’t seem to want to verify it, either. Kirkpatrick hasn’t provided the evidence these sources shared with Congress and seems to have publicly downplayed how operating under Title 10 authority obstructs his ability to verify the information, which seems to suggest he doesn’t desire to investigate and verify the data and so effectively execute the job he was tasked with. In his interview with Coulthart, Grusch also mentioned how he has known Sean Kirkpatrick for roughly 8 years, and he expressed some concerns to him about a year ago regarding what he was amassing from his interviews, and the guy has thus far failed to follow up with him. He has his phone number, he said. He should be able to make the same investigative discoveries he did, he says. And though he falls short of saying Kirkpatrick is lying or deceiving Congress and the American public, he looks sincerely disappointed, almost hurt when he says this.

4. The Revelations of Shellenberger.

Between his article and subsequent interviews with him on the topic, Shellenberger revealed that during his time reporting on nuclear energy, he came across a lot of eyewitness testimony suggesting the reality of UFOs, and over the last few years he’s been interviewing multiple people, the testimonies of which confirm much of what Grusch has said. Shellengerger says that “multiple sources” – and the article implies there were three sources, but this was never stated outright – who were

“… close to the matter have come forward to tell Public [referring to the free and public aspect of substack, I believe] that Grusch’s core claims are accurate. The individuals are all either high-ranking intelligence officials, former intelligence officials, or individuals who we could verify were involved in U.S. government UAP efforts for three or more decades each. Two of them have testified, including as recently as last year, to both AARO and Congress. The individuals said they had seen or been presented with “credible” and “verifiable” evidence that the U.S. government, and U.S. military contractors, possess at least 12 or more alien space crafts…”

These sources, he said, wanted to speak out now to provide support and validation for Grush’s testimony, which they felt was a major step in bringing the truth to light, but due to their NDAs and/or security clearances, they wanted to remain anonymous. And two of the three sources, he added, refused to answer particular questions, on or off the record, for fear of reprisals. Despite their collective facelessness and selective censorship, however, much of what they had to say I have found quite illuminating, and it provides elaboration on Grusch’s public testimony.

These sources, he says, have seen or have been presented with credible and verifiable evidence that the US government and military contractors were involved in a UFO retrieval and reverse-engineering program. Like Grusch, many of his sources echo the claim that we didn’t only retrieve these craft through crash recoveries, but by deliberately bringing them down as well as through cases where the aliens abandoned the craft and left them unoccupied. One of his contacts, a contractor who also shared this data with Congress and ARRO, alleged that we were in possession of 12 to 15 craft, either from a crash, a landing, or “that we catch,” and that we tend to acquire another one or two of them every half a decade.

In his interview on Rising, apparently speaking on behalf of all of his contacts, Shellenberger says the retrieval program involves cases of craft having crashed, craft having been abandoned, and crafts making it into military hands in “other ways,” which makes me think of an exchange program, those ominous “agreements” Grusch alluded to – but he doesn’t go into detail and, to my unbridled frustration, this line isn’t followed up on. He also mentions he’s not the lone confessional, that others are interviewing these people, among them Christopher Mellon, who published an article in Politico referencing at least four witnesses who, for all he knows, may be some of the very same people he spoke to, as they don’t share information with each other.

Yet another contractor claimed there were at least four distinct morphologies of these crafts, and of the retrieved ones he was aware of, six were damaged and six others were in good shape. Another source described having personally seen three different kinds of craft, with one of them being the triangular or delta-shaped craft described by so many UFO witnesses, but another with a morphology I’ve never heard of and find difficult to properly visualize. According to Shellenberger, the guy described it as looking akin to “a chopped up helicopter, with the front bubble of a Huey helicopter, with the plastic windows, or more like a deep sea submarine, with a thick piece of glass bubble shaped, and where the tail rudder should have been, it was a black, egg-shaped pancake, and instead of landing gear it had upside-down rams horns that went from the top to the bottom and rested on the ends of the horns.”

I really wish even a rough sketch would have accompanied the article.

All sources apparently claimed that the Pentagon and the military contractors move the craft around between contractor facilities and military bases – including the infamous Area 51 – in their continued efforts to research the technology, though it seems there were conflicting allegations regarding whether or not the US had been able to successfully reverse-engineer and replicate the technology or, for that matter, even operate the NHI craft already in their possession.

According to one of his sources, between the government and their contractors, there were only between 100-700 individuals who knew about the UFO retrieval program; according to another, far fewer knew about the reverse-engineering and replication aspect. Regardless of how far they alleged we had gotten in understanding or operating the technology, all sources apparently agreed that the suffocating secrecy surrounding the program, which strictly forbids the kind of sharing of data and brainstorming between scientists and engineers that is so vital to scientific progress, was a major impediment.

Shellenberger also describes one military contractor that claimed there was an effort by a major aerospace corporation some thirteen years ago, in December of 2010, to circumvent this obstacle. What they had proposed, according to Shellenberger, was to create “a buffer organization to prevent [civilian] scientists and engineers who lacked top-secret clearance from learning where the tech they worked on came from” but would create an environment where they could share information and so be more likely to produce the kind of results that were desired from the higher-ups. When the vice president of the aerospace corporation took it back to an unnamed government agency, however, this proposal was swiftly and rather aggressively shut down by the military – to such an extent that the vice president was evidently “pretty stressed out about the whole thing.”

With respect to the bodies of dead aliens, he did confess to having confirmation of that from one of his sources, though he kept it out of the article, wishing to lesson “ontological shock,” a term he references Grusch having used, but again, I don’t recall that and to keep the focus on the retrieval program.

As to Grusch’s claims that there has been a secret cold war with respect to UFO reverse-engineering with our adversaries – and he mentions in particular that it’s between the US, China, and Russia, which to my knowledge Grusch himself did not specify – it was evidently something he wasn’t able to disconfirm or confirm, as his contacts simply didn’t know. What he does insist is that the data given to him by his contacts was data they also shared with AARO, which they have in turn evidently refused to provide to Congress.

Shellenberger added that he only felt comfortable writing his article now. In April of 2023, the ARRO director said there was no “credible” evidence of ETI, but after Grusch’s courageous act of stepping forward and the ICIG’s July 2022 determination that the information provided by Grusch and others constituted “credible and urgent” information, this statement was now changed. Now, the ARRO claims, through the DOD spokesperson, that there’s no “verifiable” evidence.

Shellenberger says this evidence is indeed verifiable. While there may certainly be resistance, we have civilian control over our military: you have to go into these facilities and look for these craft. Congress has to make it clear that this is not up to the military to withhold, it’s the right of the people to know what our tax dollars are being invested in.

5. The US Congress Responds.

The responses from members of Congress to Grusch’s allegations, while it has certainly not been unanimous, have been surprisingly open-minded, even all-in, and sober concern has been revealed.

On or around June 22, at least to NewsNation, Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) gave his opinion on the Grusch revelations. While he can’t verify whether The Program exists, some of the claims Grusch made evidently track with what he’s heard in briefings after the US shot down those three UFOs this past winter.

“I’m not surprised, necessarily, by these latest allegations,” he said, “because it sounds pretty close to what they kind of begrudgingly admitted to us in the briefing. It’s not good. None of it’s good. I think we want to get to the bottom of this. I think it’s disturbing.”

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), who led the Senate’s UAP hearing last April, assured us that: “I’m willing to do the work and analyze it and figure it out. We need to just look into whether there are rogue SAP programs that no one is providing oversight for. The goal for me will be to have a hearing on that at some point so that we can assess if these SAP’s actually exist. So if there are SAPs out there that are somehow outside of the normal chain of command and outside the normal appropriations process, they have to divulge that to Congress.”

The most explosive commentaries by members of Congress in this context, at least in my opinion, came when Joe Khaleel from NewsNation interviewed Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL), vice chairman on the Senate Intelligence Committee, on June 27th, and when John Michael Goldier interviewed Representative Tim Burchett (R-TN 2nd District) on his podcast, Event Horizon, on July 2nd.

“I will say there are people that have come forward to share information with our committee over the last couple of years,” Rubio confessed on camera. “I would imagine some of them are potentially some of the same people that perhaps [Grusch is] referring to. I want to be very protective of these people. A lot of these people came to us even before these protections were in the law for whistleblowers to come forward.”

And these people have considerable access and status. “Most of these people at some point or maybe even currently have held very high clearances in high positions within our government,” he continued, “so you do ask yourself, like, what incentive would so many people with that kind of qualification — these are serious people — have to come forward and make something up?”

They remain anonymous for entirely understandable reasons, too. “A lot of them are very fearful,” he says “Fearful of their jobs, fearful of their clearances, fearful of their career, and some frankly are fearful of harm coming to them. People we entrusted to do some very important things for our country are saying some pretty incredible things that I think we have an obligation to take seriously and listen to.”

He emphasizes that he doesn’t want to jump to conclusions, and refuses to claim that he believes them or not, but there is more than sufficient evidence that he and his colleagues on the US Senate Select Committee on Intelligence are taking their allegations very fucking seriously.

Then there was the commentary of Representative Tim Burchett. While I didn’t watch the podcast myself, he was quoted as saying on Steve Bannon’s podcast: “I think it’s a little bit of madness and a whole lot of reality. I do believe we’ve recovered a craft at some point.”

He also was interviewed on Event Horizon, the podcast of sci-fi author John Michael Goldier, however, where I took extensive notes, and what he had to say certainly fleshed out that quotation above.
When asked if he believes Grusch, he was quick to assert that he not only did but he was briefed by countless people In The Know who seemed to corroborate what he said before Grusch even came on the scene. He’s seen compelling evidence of non-human presence that isn’t in the mainstream media that he can’t talk about. And he knows things are being hidden from Congress as well. He specifically mentioned an occasion when Representative Matt Gaetz (R-FL 1st District), Representative Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL 13th District), and himself were briefed in Florida and were informed that they “were going to get to see some things.” He warned Matt Gates they were going to pull back, and indeed they did – the three of them saw none of it. They were told it was because they didn’t have the proper clearance, which was curious, as they had the highest levels of clearance as Congressmen. Gaetz even served on the Military Funding Committee.

He also explained a very sneaky technique, one he described as a sort of trap, that they’ll use when they don’t want Congress to speak about something. They’ll put it in a classified briefing and you have to read it in a skiff. He explained how you have to turn your cell phones, fit bits and other electronic devices off and put them in a secure vault before going in. When they brief you, however, it’ll often turn out to be information that was already out there, though unconfirmed, and which you could have easily spoken about before, but now that they’ve briefed you on it, you can’t speak about it legally. Though he says he doesn’t do this with respect to the UFO subject, he often won’t go to these meetings because he knows they’re just going to tell him something he already knows and he wants to freely speak about the subject with the press.

He also says they plan on holding House hearings with an equal number of Democrats and Republicans, and that he is determined to keep this matter bipartisan. When asked if there was any way that Those in the Know could lay the UFO situation out for him in such a way that he might agree the public should be kept in the dark, he offered a hard no, asserting that they could have destroyed humanity already if they wanted to and there would be no way we could defend ourselves, so he reasons they wouldn’t be a threat to us. While I personally find his assumption here to be naive, I do hope his confidence holds strong throughout this.

Twice Goldier asked him a question I have been wondering myself. If indeed it’s proven that The Program exists – that there are SAPs that have no proper Congressional oversight – what can be done about it? He mentions the Defense Authorization Act, by which I believe he means that if these programs exist, Congress has the power to gut their funding, and by this, he seems to mean the Pentagon in general. He wants to bring in those running The Program before the committee, swear them under oath, and release the unredacted truth to the American people, who can decide where to go with it themselves.

He does seem skeptical that we’ll ever know the entirety of the truth, however, citing how it’s been over half a century since Kennedy was assassinated and they still refuse to release the files. He also claims there are certainly people in Congress who are compromised – that those truly in power have put them in situations where they now can blackmail them if necessary, so they’re essentially owned by them. He does assert, however, that we’ll at the very least get closer to the truth.

In any case, there is certainly evidence that Congress is taking assertions such as those Grusch made with considerable seriousness.

As reported on June 22, in the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024, in Section 1104, funding will not be authorized for any UFO-related activities (and they specifically mention analysis and reverse-engineering of craft) that have not been provided Congressional oversight. Furthermore: “Any person currently or formerly under contract with the Federal Government that has in their possession material or information provided by or derived from the Federal Government relating to unidentified anomalous phenomena that formerly or currently is protected by any form of special access or restricted access shall” notify the director of AARO within 60 days of the bill’s enactment and provide within 180 days provide for ARRO, “for assessment, analysis, and inspection” not only “all such material and information” but “a comprehensive list of all non-earth origin or exotic unidentified anomalous phenomena material.” ARRO must then provide this to Congress.

Honestly, this blows my mind.

I’ll be painfully honest here and confess that this is the last thing I ever expected. At least over the last two decades, I developed the pessimistic, cynical opinion that even if saucers stationed themselves over every major city on earth that nothing even vaguely approximating disclosure would occur. On the absolute contrary, I felt confident that our government and the career skeptics would keep up their game.

“UFOs? What UFOs? What you clearly uneducated, inbred idiots are seeing the light from Venus reflecting off a weather balloon, viewed through swamp gas.”

Yet here an intelligent, strategic, patriotic whistleblower provided legal, public testimony that paved the way for his sources and others In the Know that he didn’t even know about to utter what they knew of The Horrible Truth and the illegal and unethical activities that a rogue minority in our crooked government have engaged in for what disturbingly approximates a century, and even Congress has sided with them and felt fit to draw a fucking line.

I remain cynical, yet at the same time – and perhaps paradoxically – cautiously optimistic, and for holy fuck sure intensely curious as to where all this may lead. If nothing else, I hope to hell it brings all of us, as a species, a little closer to awareness of the greater, cosmic context of which we’ve always been a part, and have unethically been kept ignorant, and that in the end, we don’t find that we’ve been played, in the process, by truly super-intelligent, alien hands.