[imagesource: Staff/AFP/Getty Images]
Okay, so we’re all taking UFOs seriously now, including the US government.
Since the Pentagon released that UFO report, shedding light on more than 140 instances of Unexplained Aerial Phenomena (UAPs), as they are officially referred to, everyone from senators to former presidents and those in Congress has been taking the possibility of extraterrestrial life way more seriously.
Last year, the US Congress gave the Pentagon more time and funds to study the situation in our skies and is now asking them to focus only on objects that haven’t been designed by human hands.
That is a pretty big deal.
US Navy pilots have been going on about the fact that there are weird things flying around that are not of this Earth for ages, and now Congress has admitted that there may be something very real to their claims.
In fact, Congress has basically admitted that it doesn’t believe all UFOs are “man-made”, notes VICE:
Buried deep in a report that’s an addendum to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023, a budget that governs America’s clandestine services, Congress made two startling claims.
The first is that “cross-domain transmedium threats to the United States national security are expanding exponentially.”
The second is that it wants to distinguish between UFOs that are human in origin and those that are not: “Temporary nonattributed objects, or those that are positively identified as man-made after analysis, will be passed to appropriate offices and should not be considered under the definition as unidentified aerospace-undersea phenomena,” the document states.
UAP is being reclassified as Unidentified Aerospace-Undersea Phenomena in the Bill and the Pentagon’s office will be renamed in line with this.
The Pentagon announced it was opening the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) in July to study “cross-domain transmedium” threats, which are remarkably advanced bits of technology that, by the Pentagon’s definition, can move from water to air to space in ways we don’t quite understand.
Experts called it earlier this year, saying that 2022 would be far more profound as far as UFO disclosure and discovery becoming more commonplace goes.
Last year, a leaked video of something seamlessly flying from the air to the water was confirmed as real by the Pentagon:
The Hill is questioning the credulity of Congress’ latest interest and is shocked at how lawmakers are making these claims without any actual evidence.
But then again, why would they set up a whole section of the government to study this area if they didn’t think it worthwhile?
The mere fact that Congress’s new definition of “UFO” excludes “man-made” objects is startling, nevermind that they are now also forcing government to focus on objects that are not “man-made”:
Make no mistake: One branch of the American government implying that UFOs have non-human origins is an explosive development.
Senator Marco Rubio, the vice chair of the Senate Select Committee overseeing intelligence that issued the report, actually wants the UFOs to be alien and not some advanced technology from Russia or China.
That statement also speaks volumes. The greatest threat to mankind is right here on this planet.
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