UFOs, or as they’ve been termed by the government, UAPs, are starting to be taken a bit more seriously. They are no longer dismissed as the result of the hyperactive imagination of someone who watched Steven Spielberg’s “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” too late at night; they are a true scientific anomaly that has become a new research focus of both NASA and the Pentagon.
After former U.S. intelligence officer and whistleblower David Grusch told NewsNation in June that UFOs are real and that the U.S. government is in possession of such crashed objects, he and two other whistleblowers testified before a Congressional hearing on UFOs in July.
Grusch and his fellow whistleblowers, both former Navy pilots, detailed their first-hand experiences with unidentified aerial phenomena demonstrating behavior that they said could not be replicated by human technology.
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The U.S. Department of Defense re-established its All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) in July 2022 to lead surveillance and research into purported UFOs.
The head of AARO testified in April that the Pentagon has uncovered “no credible evidence thus far of extraterrestrial activity, off-world technology or objects that defy the known laws of physics.”
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