The Information Age is in full swing, baby. We live in a time of confusion as commodity. May the best organized and well-funded liar win. What do ya win? The public’s confidence. What can you gain from that? Only everything.
Ufology has long been the playground of Pentagon psyops. Whether it’s spinning QAnon-like fantasies on message boards (think “Project SERPO”) or promoting and endorsing fraudulent crash cases, fraudulent military whistleblowers, fraudulent leaked documents, the Pentagon’s got something to hook you on UFOs.
Or they used to. Back when the term “UFO” and its automatic association with alien spaceships was useful to them. They actually wanted our Cold War enemies to think we had crashed alien tech so they would send their spies a’snooping and we could capture them. Also, one may assume, to follow the information trail to see how and to where it was disseminated.
But now the game has changed and with it, the name. “UAP” instead of “UFO.” Phenomena, not objects. And, I suspect, they’ve turned their psyop away from foreign enemies and onto us all. They at least want funding for military projects. At most… something more disturbing, probably. I shan’t speculate.
I make a point of this in my last book, Aliens: The First and Final Disclosure. I argue that the reason they’re doing this is to replace the “War on Terror” (a meaningless war on a concept that nevertheless requires actual nations to invade and occupy and people to kill) with the “War on Phenomena” (even more meaningless and completely nonsensical, save for its attachment to the pre-made alien mythos already baked in. Here, the Pentagon may ask for funding to fight phenomena. Could be foreign… could be alien… who’s to say? Just give us the money and nobody gets hurt. Nobody gets invaded or occupied, unless you count all of our minds and wallets with this garbage.)
So, listen, folks. If you want to retain your sanity and not play along, here are 4 rules of disengagement moving forward:
1.) Stop playing the disclosure game. Don’t ask for it. Don’t demand it. Don’t believe it when Congress holds a hearing or whichever military spokesperson tantalizes you with forthcoming revelations. They never give you what you thirst for because they are meant to keep you thirsty.
2.) Anyone who is or was a career military/FBI/CIA person must immediately be disregarded no matter how much of a rockstar you have made them. Their career paths disqualify them from being trustworthy whether they are on the level or not. That’s just the way it’s got to be. I know it’s hard putting down the Luis Elizondo crack pipe and walking away from your addiction to perpetual promises of bigger things coming sometime in the near future by a guy who looks and speaks like just some dude–you know: like you and me. But this is what you must do if you’re at all serious about the subject. Just some dude like you and me wouldn’t be in the know about anything. But he would be handy as a spokesperson for just about anything, especially if he thought he was in on it, an important player in the game.
3.) Realize that it’s okay not to know what motivates someone to drop them. Whether they’re useful idiots being duped or con artists or willful disinformation agents for the Pentagon, the outcome is the same: they are being used to play you. Jeremy Corbell is a fine example of this. Just think a moment. Jeremy Corbell rides onto the scene via Bob Lazar’s coattails. If you’re the Navy and you’re on the up and up, do you leak UAP footage to the Bob Lazar pro wrestling manager as opposed to, say, a legit news organization?
4.) As with not trusting official people, stop trusting official footage. Again, it does not matter if it’s truly mysterious or not. Based on the pilot testimony alone, which I trust, by the way, I can make a case for the Tic Tac UAP being an actual high strangeness event. But I cannot trust the context in which this event was given an official spotlight, so it’s not worth pursuing. Pursuing it becomes their game of psyop rabbit holes, not my fact-finding mission.
I don’t know all of what the game being played is, beyond a massive funding grift. I just know that we are being purposely confused, purposely gaslit. We are being told over and over to associate unknown foreign technology with aliens. Someone in the Pentagon wants those two nebulous things to be one thing in our minds. Yes, the Tic Tac incident could be construed as high strangeness. But it’s absolutely intertwined with a push for funding for submersible drones, as I noted in my book. And the idea that we currently have nothing that can maneuver like the Tic Tac is a lie. here’s a footnote from my book you will find revealing:
Check out what we already have against the claim that something that behaves like the Tic Tac is lightyears ahead of anything we’ve got: Liszewski, Andrew. “Ingenious Underwater Drone Can Transition to Flight in Less Than a Second.” Gizmodo, 05/19/2022, https://gizmodo.com/flying-swimming-drone-suction-cup-1848931890?.
Aliens: The First and Final Disclosure
The latest use of this tactic is happening right now. A little over a month ago, we were shooting down Chinese spy balloons over America that we were told we didn’t know were there because the Pentagon was not looking for them until they widened their surveillance net. Allegedly, the Chinese government was considering using balloons as a mothership for drone deployment over our country. The media referred to these balloons as UAP over and over again until we figured out (or were told) what they actually were.
Cut to a week ago, when Sean Kirkpatrick, the head of the Pentagon’s unidentified aerial phenomena research office, said in a report draft titled, “Physical Constraints on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena”:
“[A]n artificial interstellar object could potentially be a parent craft that releases many small probes during its close passage to Earth, an operational construct not too dissimilar from NASA missions…. With proper design, these tiny probes would reach the Earth or other solar system planets for exploration, as the parent craft passes by within a fraction of the Earth-Sun separation…. Astronomers would not be able to notice the spray of mini-probes because they do not reflect enough sunlight for existing survey telescopes to notice them.”
https://www.militarytimes.com/off-duty/military-culture/2023/03/09/pentagon-ufo-chief-says-alien-mothership-in-our-solar-system-possible/
We may not yet know all of why we are now being trained to conflate UFOs with UAP and aliens with foreign technology, but we are. The only way out is to stop giving it life. Stop paying any more than passing attention. Stop thinking and arguing from within the official contexts provided. And don’t replace that with some other crap from somewhere else because that’s just as likely to be part of the controlled dialogue, too.
Get off the crazy ride. If you have to ask, “Is this alien or military,” it’s military. That’s your answer.
Now stop. This is equivalence training. The Tic Tac tactic.
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