In Disclosure Day, Steven Spielberg wants us to trust aliens
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said in a statement that the documents "have long fueled justified speculation — and it's time the American people see it for themselves."
The United States government's recent release of hundreds of previously classified unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs) cases spanning the 1940s to the present, along with the new Steven Spielberg movie,
The White House launched a website teasing new information on extraterrestrials this week, but it actually delivers immigrant arrest data.
Neil deGrasse Tyson calls on the government to just show the alien, saying Americans are ready for disclosure after years of hearings and UAP files.
Americans "deserve the truth," a U.S. congressman has told a press conference as part of a wider transparency campaign.
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Neil deGrasse Tyson urges government to just ‘show the alien’ after latest UFO files release
Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson has a blunt request for the government as the Pentagon rolls out the highly anticipated UFO files — just “show the alien!” Tyson shared his two cents Monday on “The Fox News Rundown” while arguing the American public is more than ready for irrefutable evidence that aliens exist.
The Pentagon has released another batch of ‘UFO Files’ with footage of unknown objects in the sky—here are the most common alien theories, explained. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.
On Thursday, the White House posted several cryptic videos on social media that teased an upcoming announcement connected to an “aliens.gov” web address. The videos, featuring imagery such as crop circles and UFOs, initially seemed to be indicating some announcement or revelation concerning extraterrestrial life.
New SETI protocols outline how scientists should verify, share, and respond to potential evidence of alien intelligence in the modern information age.
A longtime UFO sceptic who once made a public $1,000 (£790) bet that alien disclosure would 'never happen' has now taken a seat on a new UAP advisory council, sparking fresh debate over whether a critic can objectively investigate a phenomenon he has spent years questioning.
