How UAP Crash Retrievals May Be a Vehicle for Disclosure
The evidence continues to mount and has been there all along.
The web it weaves is murky.
No doubt we are seeing a combination of many things the least of which is nuts and bolts craft and their occupants.
The evidence for much of what we see is a combination of seen and unseen. Material and immaterial.
The distinct possibility that an entire biosphere of unseen creatures and entities exists is not fantasy. Our inability to be open-minded is the problem. Our materialistic, naturalistic view of creation is very narrow. Many things just pass us by.
Consider the videos below and think outside the box!
Richard Dolan and Michael Schratt are among the few UAP researchers who have credibility and integrity.
Michael Schratt continues his excellent analysis of the crash retrieval records of the late Leonard Stringfield.
This video and several talented illustrators give us a vision of what Stringfield's records contain. What we see by the records is a long-standing UAP crash retrieval program or programs with our government and other governments.
The upcoming film by James Fox "The Program" should give us more information about what the governments of the world are keeping secret.
James Fox discusses his new film “The Program” and the UAP Disclosure Act. (August 23rd 2024)
Video from Alieninfoo
My Interview with Acclaimed ‘Phenomenon’ Director James Fox
Lockheed Martin: ‘Questions About UAPs Are Best Addressed by the U.S. Government’
This is the second installment in a series about the scientifically unexplained.
Apparently even when you hold the illustrious position in the United States government of deputy assistant secretary of defense for intelligence, you have to skulk around a bit to get at the truth when it comes to UFOs.
Christopher Mellon, who served in that exulted position during the Clinton and George W. Bush Administrations, surreptitiously met with a source in the Pentagon parking lot less than a decade ago to obtain a potentially earthshaking package.
The package contained three videos recorded by U.S. Navy pilots between 2004 and 2015.
Although Mellon later revealed he helped provide material to The New York Times for the publication’s game-changing expose in December 2017 about a Pentagon UFO program, he contends the Gray Lady’s eventual coverage failed to capture the bigger story.
The Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), revealed by The Times, was a covert initiative funded by the U.S. government to investigate UFOs, now widely referred to in official circles as “unexplained anomalous phenomena,” or UAP. Some agencies use the ‘A’ in the acronym to mean aerial.
While revelations reported in The Times about the UFO program were deeply significant, the focus on that component of the story failed to grab readers by the lapels and scream: DUDE, WE ARE NOT ALONE!
It felt like The Times hedged more than slightly, not wanting to get too far out in front of the societally acceptable, even while producing world-class, groundbreaking journalism on the topic. (Or, perhaps, corners of The Times are buried deep in stubborn yet understandable disbelief of the most unbelievable.)
“In the end, I have to say, I was still extraordinarily disappointed with The New York Times because they focused on this small, AATIP program,” Mellon stated in The Phenomenon, a jaw-dropping 2020 documentary that examines UAP. “And the real story, in my mind at least, should have been, these things are real. They’re here. This is happening now.”
Filmmaker James Fox, right, interviewed former President Bill Clinton’s White House Chief of Staff John Podesta for “The Phenomenon.” Podesta is a longtime advocate for government transparency on UFOs.
Prepare, Accept, Understand
I had the extraordinary opportunity last week to interview James Fox, the film’s accomplished director.
My conversation with Fox materialized after I asked scientist Robert Powell, co-founder of the Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies (interviewed for last week’s Stone’s Throw column on the Hudson Valley’s UFO history), if he had a documentary to flag for any hardcore, “nothing-to-see-here-folks” deniers who might challenge the reporting. (In fairness and generally speaking, I was a lifelong agnostic on UFOs myself until initiating a deep dive three weeks ago.)
The scientist then introduced me to the filmmaker.
As for Mellon, who anchors the film’s opening scene, he was no mid-level bureaucrat.
He served in his high-level Pentagon position for Democratic and Republican presidential administrations, working closely with other security officials, intelligence agencies and the military branches.
“We need to begin to prepare, to accept and understand that we are not alone in the universe,” the widely respected, seemingly sober-minded Mellon dramatically asserts in Fox’s film..." from the article: My Interview with Acclaimed ‘Phenomenon’ Director James Fox
UAP CRASH RETRIEVALS, BODIES, & SECRECY | Richard Dolan Show w/Michael Schratt
Video from Richard Dolan Intelligent Disclosure
"Richard Dolan interviews UAP/UFO historian Michael Schratt, who discusses several intriguing cases of UFO encounters and crash retrievals. Michael begins with a detailed account of Danny Sheehan's experience at the Library of Congress in 1977, where Sheehan saw classified photos of a UFO crash retrieval. Michael presents meticulously rendered illustrations of this incident as well as other cases, including a massive USO sighting off the coast of Corpus Christi in 1997, a 1991 USS Nimitz encounter with a giant black triangle, and a 1973 sighting at Great Lakes Naval Training Center. Schratt also discusses the potential involvement of the Glomar Explorer in UFO retrievals and shares insights from aerospace illustrator Mark McCandlish about secret technologies at Air Force Plant 42. The episode concludes with mentions of cases from Ryan Wood's book "Magic Eyes Only," highlighting the extent of UFO crash retrievals. Visit Michael Schratt's YouTube channel: / @michaelschrattofficial " from the video introduction
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