|

by
A Lily Bit
December 18, 2025
from
ALilyBit Website
|
I've
been part of what people call
"the
Deep State" for years.
Now
I'm exposing it and the people that created and run it.
Bit by bit... |

Why UFO
Disclosure
will Never be
Announced
and How it's
Happening Anyway...
Every pilot has stories. Every single one. I do too...
You gather enough hours in the air, enough night
flights over empty terrain, pushing your plane home in the empty,
bitter cold Arctic winter night, and you will see things that do not
fit into the neat categories your training prepared you for. Lights
that move in ways that mock your understanding of propulsion.
Objects that appear on radar and then simply
cease to exist. Formations that hold steady against winds that
should scatter them, then accelerate beyond any velocity you have
ever seen an aircraft achieve and vanish as if they were never
there.
Maybe you were tired. Maybe your eyes were strained. Perhaps your
mind drifted to the comforting warmth of the moment you'll reach
home in a couple more hours.
And maybe you report these things through the
proper channels, or maybe better not, depending on what you have
learned from colleagues who reported before you and discovered that
the reward for honesty was paperwork, psychiatric evaluation, and a
career trajectory that suddenly flattened.
Most of us learn not to report. Instead, we learn to land, debrief
only the parts of the mission that fit the expected narrative, and
save the other stories for our families and friends, or for late
nights in bars where everyone had their own stories and no one was
naive enough to believe that speaking them aloud would make a
difference.
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It's a simple gesture that doesn't cost you anything, but it goes a
long way in promoting this post, combating censorship, and fighting
the issues that you are apparently not a big fan of.
At the time of writing this, I have spent 14 years in cockpits -
some of which for the United States Air Force - and when I watch the
current circus - the drone hysteria over New Jersey, the breathless
news cycles, the Pentagon spokespeople delivering carefully worded
non-denials, the parade of former officials hinting at secrets they
cannot "quite reveal" - I do not watch it as a civilian trying to
figure out whether any of this is real.
I watch it as someone who knows, from direct
personal experience, that anomalous objects in controlled airspace
are not a novelty invented by social media or a fever dream of
conspiracy theorists.
They have always been there. The question that interests me now is
not whether something unusual is happening. The question is why,
after decades of institutional silence and systematic ridicule of
anyone who spoke up, we are suddenly being encouraged to pay
attention.
Because make no mistake: we are being encouraged. The timing of
these sighting waves is not organic. The media coverage is not
accidental.
The drip-feed of
congressional hearings, whistleblower
testimonies, and official acknowledgments follows a
rhythm that anyone with intelligence training recognizes as
managed information release.
When thousands of people across multiple states
simultaneously start reporting aerial phenomena over critical
infrastructure, and when the official response toggles between
performative concern and studied vagueness, you are not witnessing
spontaneous discovery. You are witnessing an operation.
The only questions worth asking are: whose
operation, and toward what end?
I have heard the theories. We all have.
Project Blue Beam - the idea
that a faked alien invasion will be staged to justify global
government and the final dissolution of national sovereignty.
Distraction from economic collapse, from
political scandal, from whatever crisis the powers that be would
prefer you not examine too closely.
Preparation for a genuine threat that cannot be
disclosed directly without causing panic, so the public must be
acclimated gradually through a controlled drip of partial
revelations. Testing of advanced military technology, either
domestic or foreign, with the UFO narrative providing convenient
cover for capabilities that cannot be officially acknowledged.
Deliberate destabilization of consensus reality
as a form of psychological warfare, keeping the population confused,
uncertain, and therefore malleable.
I have heard all of these theories, and I cannot dismiss any of them
entirely, because I have seen how information operations work from
the inside, and I know that the most effective ones layer multiple
objectives simultaneously so that even those executing them may not
fully understand the larger design.
Picture yourself behind the wheel of your car on an unremarkable
Tuesday afternoon, perhaps commuting home from work, perhaps running
errands, perhaps driving to visit someone you haven't seen in a
while. The radio plays whatever music suits your mood, the traffic
moves at its predictable pace, and your mind drifts through the
ordinary concerns of an ordinary day.
You stop at a red light. The music cuts out abruptly, replaced by
the voice of a news anchor whose tone has shifted into something you
rarely hear outside of national emergencies.
"Dear listeners, an extraordinary report has
just reached us. Unknown objects have appeared over major cities
across the entire world. Several have landed.
Heads of state are addressing their nations
at this very moment with a single message: We are not alone."
The adrenaline hits your bloodstream before your
conscious mind has fully processed what you've heard.
You look around frantically at the other drivers
stopped beside you, searching their faces for some confirmation that
this is real, that they heard it too, that you are collectively
witnessing what would be, without question, the most significant
moment in the entire history of human civilization.
I am here to tell you that this moment will never come. Not like
that. Not ever.
This assertion will strike many as premature, pessimistic, or
perhaps even willfully ignorant given everything that has emerged in
recent years regarding unidentified anomalous phenomena.
We have witnessed congressional hearings,
whistleblowers with high-level security clearances testifying under
oath, mysterious objects shot down over North American airspace,
unexplained drone swarms over critical infrastructure on multiple
continents, and an unprecedented level of mainstream media coverage
of a topic that was, until recently, relegated to the fringes of
serious discourse. Something is clearly happening.
The atmosphere around this subject has shifted
palpably, charged with a sense of imminent revelation that longtime
researchers describe as unlike anything they have experienced
before.
Surely, many think, the dam is about to break. Surely the pressure
has built to the point where someone, somewhere, will finally open
the hangar doors, wheel out the recovered craft, present the
nonhuman bodies to the cameras, and announce to a waiting world that
everything we thought we knew about our place in the cosmos was
incomplete.
Surely
Disclosure is just around the
corner.
Before we proceed, a note on terminology for those who have not
marinated in this subject for years.
"Disclosure," in the context of unidentified
aerial phenomena and the question of nonhuman intelligence,
refers to the hypothetical moment when governments -
particularly the United States government, which is assumed to
possess the most comprehensive knowledge on the matter -
officially and publicly confirm that
we are not alone.
That intelligent beings other than humans
exist, that they are here, that they have been interacting with
our planet and our species, and that this reality has been known
and concealed from the public for decades.
In the popular imagination, disclosure is an
event:
a press conference, an announcement, a
presidential address in which the veil is finally lifted and
humanity collectively learns what insiders have allegedly known
all along.
It is the moment when the question "Do
you believe in UFOs?"
becomes as absurd as asking whether someone believes in commercial
aviation.
Disclosure, for those who await it,
represents nothing less than the most significant paradigm shift
in human history - the definitive end of our cosmic isolation
and the beginning of whatever comes next. It is this event, this
singular revelatory moment, that I am telling you will never
come.
Disclosure, as it is commonly imagined, fundamentally
misunderstands both the nature of the phenomenon and the nature
of how human perception transforms over time.
The dramatic reveal, the single definitive moment
when skepticism becomes impossible and reality restructures itself
in an instant - this is a fantasy borrowed from Hollywood
narratives, not a process that has any precedent in how humanity
actually comes to terms with paradigm-shifting truths.
What we are experiencing instead, and what we have been experiencing
for decades if not centuries, is something far more subtle, far more
gradual, and in its own way far more profound: a slow, methodical
acclimation of collective human consciousness to a reality that may
currently lie beyond our conceptual frameworks to fully integrate.
We are not waiting for Disclosure. We are living
through it. We simply cannot perceive the magnitude of the change
while we are inside it, in the same way that a child standing before
a mirror cannot watch themselves grow.
To understand why the momentous announcement will never come, we
must first examine the pattern that has repeated itself with
remarkable consistency across the modern era of this phenomenon. The
structure is always the same, regardless of the specific actors or
circumstances involved.
First, anomalous events occur - objects appear in
the sky exhibiting flight characteristics that defy conventional
explanation, witnessed by credible observers and sometimes tracked
on multiple independent sensor systems.
The public becomes aware of these events, either through direct
observation or media coverage, and interest spikes.
Then, individuals emerge from within the
military, intelligence, or scientific establishments who possess
some form of insider knowledge and who claim, often at "considerable
personal risk", that the phenomenon is real, that it has been
investigated by secret programs, that craft and even biological
material have been recovered, and that the public has been
systematically deceived about all of this.
These whistleblowers present their claims, sometimes with supporting
documentation, sometimes with the names of additional witnesses who
could corroborate their accounts. The claims generate excitement,
anticipation, a sense that the final revelation is imminent.
And then, invariably, official investigations are
conducted, reports are issued, and those reports conclude that no
evidence supports the existence of extraterrestrial or otherworldly
technology, that no secret programs have recovered nonhuman craft,
that there is nothing to see here, that the matter is closed.
The cycle completes, the attention fades, and we
wait for the next iteration.
This pattern has been playing out since the
late 1940s. We can trace it through
the Roswell incident and the
subsequent decades of claim and counterclaim about what was
actually recovered in the New Mexico desert.
We can trace it through Project Blue Book,
the official Air Force investigation that catalogued thousands
of sightings before concluding in 1969 that none of them
represented anything beyond misidentification, natural
phenomena, or conventional aircraft, despite the fact that a
significant percentage of cases remained officially unexplained.
We can trace it through the disclosure press
conference of 2001, when twenty-one former military,
intelligence, and government officials publicly testified about
their knowledge of the phenomenon.
We can trace it through the revelations of
2017, when the existence of the Pentagon's Advanced Aerospace
Threat Identification Program was confirmed, accompanied by the
release of military footage showing objects performing maneuvers
that seemed to violate known physics.
And we can trace it through the events of
2023 and beyond, when David Grusch, a former intelligence
officer with one of the highest security clearances available,
testified before Congress that the United States and other
nations possess recovered nonhuman craft and have been
conducting reverse engineering programs outside of congressional
oversight, and when the Pentagon's own investigative body
subsequently released a report stating that no evidence
whatsoever supports these claims.
David Grusch is worth examining
closely because his emergence perfectly exemplifies both the hope
and the frustration that characterizes this subject.
Here was a man with impeccable credentials - an
Afghanistan veteran, a former member of the National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, someone who had served on the
official UAP Task Force, someone with a security clearance of the
highest order who had access to classified programs across the
intelligence community. He did not merely speculate or relay
secondhand rumors.
He stated explicitly that he had spoken with
individuals directly involved in the recovery and analysis of
nonhuman technology, that he had reviewed documentation confirming
these programs, that he had provided names and evidence to the
Intelligence Community Inspector General, and that he was prepared
to testify to all of this under oath before Congress, accepting the
legal consequences of perjury if his statements were false.
For those who had followed this topic for years or decades, Grusch
represented something qualitatively new: an insider with the
credentials, the access, and the willingness to go on the record
with specific, verifiable claims.
The summer of 2023 felt, to many in this
community, like the beginning of the end of secrecy. There was
electricity in the air, a sense that the walls were finally
crumbling.
And then nothing happened. Or rather, what happened was entirely
consistent with every previous iteration of the cycle.
Some media outlets attempted to discredit Grusch
by publishing details of his medical history and psychological
treatment following his military service, framing his trauma as
evidence of unreliability rather than as the entirely predictable
consequence of combat deployment.
Other voices counseled patience, arguing that the
evidence would come but that bureaucratic and legal frameworks
needed to be established first to protect additional witnesses from
prosecution.
The Pentagon conducted its investigation through
AARO - the All-domain Anomaly
Resolution Office, the successor to the UAP Task Force -
and released a report stating categorically that,
no investigation by the United States
government had ever confirmed that any UAP sighting represented
extraterrestrial technology, that no evidence existed for crash
retrieval programs or reverse engineering of otherworldly craft,
and that essentially every claim Grusch had made was without
foundation.
The report was immediately criticized by those
who pointed out that its scope was conveniently narrow, that it
relied on self-reporting by the very agencies accused of maintaining
secrecy, and that its conclusions were predetermined by the
questions it was designed to answer.
But these criticisms, however valid, did not
change the fundamental outcome. No craft were revealed. No bodies
were presented. The definitive proof remained, as it always had,
just beyond reach.
The same pattern repeated with Jake Barber, another
whistleblower who emerged in 2025 claiming direct personal
involvement in UAP recovery operations as a helicopter pilot.
Barber's claims were accompanied by video footage purportedly
showing an egg-shaped object being transported via cable, footage
that promptly garnered millions of views and just as promptly became
the subject of ridicule as skeptics rightfully pointed out the
impossibility of verifying that the object shown was anything more
than a prop or a computer-generated image.
Barber declared his willingness to testify under oath before
Congress, his claims went unconfirmed by official sources, and the
initial surge of attention gradually dissipated into the background
noise of an information environment oversaturated with competing
narratives.
The same pattern repeated with the drone incidents over New Jersey
and subsequently over Europe, when thousands of people reported
witnessing unexplained aerial objects - some seemingly emerging from
the ocean, some allegedly transforming from spheres of light into
more conventional-looking craft, some following Coast Guard vessels
and mimicking their movements - and when official spokespersons
declared that these objects posed no threat to national security
without explaining how such certainty was possible given that no
objects had been recovered or identified.
The journalist
Ross Coulthart, whose sources
had apparently indicated that government officials were in a state
of panic over these incidents and that early 2025 would see dramatic
revelations, was left to acknowledge that the dramatic revelations
had not materialized and that the story had simply faded from public
consciousness like so many before it.
The consistency of this pattern across decades should give us pause.
If we were genuinely on the verge of Disclosure
in the conventional sense, if the secrecy were truly unsustainable
and the truth about to emerge through sheer weight of evidence and
testimony, we would expect the pattern to break at some point.
We would expect the official investigations to
produce different conclusions, or the whistleblowers to produce
irrefutable physical evidence, or the phenomenon itself to manifest
in ways that precluded denial.
Instead, what we observe is a kind of
equilibrium, a dynamic stability in which the subject advances into
public awareness and then retreats, in which sensational claims
generate excitement and then dissolve into ambiguity, in which we
seem perpetually on the threshold of knowing without ever actually
crossing it.
This is not the behavior of a secret straining to
escape its confines. This is something else entirely...
To grasp what that something else might be, we need to expand our
temporal horizon considerably and examine how this phenomenon has
been perceived and reported not merely over the past eighty years
but over centuries of recorded history.
The incident at Stralsund, Germany in April 1665
offers a particularly illuminating example.
On that spring afternoon, six fishermen in
the strait between the island of Rügen and the German mainland
observed what began as a large flock of birds approaching from
the northeast.
The birds circled, coalesced into a clump,
and then transformed into the shape of a ship - a sailing
vessel, complete with masts and rigging.
Soon other ships appeared in the sky, and the
fishermen witnessed what they described as a naval battle: the
vessels firing upon one another, smoke and thunder filling the
air, masts and sails damaged by the exchange. They could make
out crew members aboard the ships, including a man in brown
clothes holding a hat beneath his arm.
After this extraordinary display concluded,
something else appeared in the heavens:
a flat, circular form, like a plate or a
large hat, colored like the moon during an eclipse, which
hovered stationary above the St. Nikolai Church until evening.
The fishermen, overwhelmed by terror,
retreated to their huts.
In the days that followed, they experienced
trembling and physical complaints in their hands, feet, heads, and
limbs - symptoms that modern researchers have sometimes interpreted
as consistent with radiation exposure.
A broadsheet published two days after the
incident officially recorded these events and noted that the
fishermen had been publicly heard and had sworn to the truth of
their testimony on their Christian conscience.
The document also provided a ready interpretive
frame for its readers: the glowing disc had hovered over a church,
and the true meaning of the spectacle was known only to Almighty
God.
The phenomenon was thus placed squarely within a religious context,
understood as a divine portent rather than as evidence of
interplanetary visitors, because the conceptual vocabulary for
extraterrestrial intelligence simply did not exist in
seventeenth-century popular consciousness.
What is remarkable about this account, however,
is how closely its core elements - luminous disc-shaped objects
hovering in the sky, physical effects on witnesses, the phenomenon
presenting itself in forms that relate to the witnesses' existing
conceptual framework (in this case, sailing ships, which would have
been immediately recognizable to Baltic fishermen) - parallel
reports from centuries later.
The content of the experience appears remarkably
consistent across time. What changes is the interpretation, the
language used to describe it, the explanatory framework into which
it is placed.
This observation becomes even more significant when we trace the
evolution of terminology and conceptualization over the twentieth
and twenty-first centuries.
In the 1940s and 1950s, the phenomenon was
discussed in terms of "flying saucers" and the "interplanetary
hypothesis" - the idea that these objects were spacecraft piloted by
beings from other planets in our solar system, perhaps Mars or
Venus.
This framing reflected the astronomical knowledge
and science fiction imaginings of the era.
Major
Donald Keyhoe, one of the
earliest and most prominent whistleblowers, stated publicly in 1952
that he believed some of the objects would prove to be of
interplanetary origin, and this was considered a reasonable, if
controversial, position within the discourse of the time.
As our understanding of the solar system expanded
and the prospects for intelligent life on Mars or Venus diminished,
the hypothesis evolved:
the visitors must be coming from other star
systems, from
exoplanets in distant regions
of the galaxy.
The term "UFO" - Unidentified Flying Object -
became standard, carrying within it the assumption that these were
physical craft navigating through space in ways analogous to our own
aviation, just vastly more advanced.
But notice what has happened in recent years. The official
terminology has shifted
from UFO to UAP - Unidentified
Anomalous Phenomena - a designation that makes no assumptions about
the objects being vehicles in the conventional sense or about their
navigating through space at all.
And the conceptual vocabulary has shifted even
more dramatically.
David Grusch did not speak of extraterrestrial technology or
otherworldly craft.
He spoke of "nonhuman intelligence" and
"nonhuman biologics."
These terms are carefully neutral regarding
origin.
They do not specify that whatever intelligence we
are dealing with comes from another planet. They leave open the
possibility that we are confronting something that has always been
here, something indigenous to Earth, something that exists alongside
humanity in a relationship we do not yet understand. (Frank
Schätzing's novel "The
Swarm" comes to mind - I highly recommend it.)
The Pentagon's denials have been equally precise in their language:
no evidence of
extraterrestrial technology, no
evidence of offworld craft.
These formulations allow for the logical
possibility that there is nonhuman technology and intelligence that
is neither extraterrestrial nor from offworld - something
terrestrial, something already present, something that the simple
frame of "aliens from space" fails to capture.
This linguistic evolution is not incidental. Language shapes
thought, and the gradual introduction of new vocabulary into public
discourse creates new conceptual possibilities that were previously
unavailable.
A person in the 1950s asked about the existence
of nonhuman intelligence would likely have understood the question
only in terms of Martians or Venusians and would have been baffled
by any suggestion that such intelligence might have origins other
than extraterrestrial.
A person today, exposed to the terminology of UAPs and NHI through
mainstream news coverage, has access to a broader conceptual space
within which to consider the question, even if they remain
personally skeptical. This broadening is itself a form of
disclosure, not of specific facts but of permissible thoughts, of
questions that can be asked without seeming insane, of possibilities
that can be entertained without social penalty.
When we examine the historical record with this perspective, a
striking pattern emerges not just in the repetitive structure of
claims and denials but in the content of what is communicated at
each stage of the cycle.
The claims made by whistleblowers and the
reassurances offered by officials have remained remarkably
consistent across decades, almost as if following a script.
The phenomenon exceeds our technological
capabilities. It does not originate with any known human source.
It is being investigated by groups operating outside normal
governmental oversight. Physical materials and craft have been
recovered. The public is being kept in the dark.
And yet, despite all this, there is no threat to
national security.
These same assertions were made by Major
Keyhoe in the 1950s, by Commander Will Miller in the
1990s, by General Rossi Carlos Pereira of Brazil in 2010,
and by David Grusch in 2023.
They were made about the Washington sightings of
1952 and about the New Jersey drones of 2024. Across seventy years,
the message has been essentially unchanged: something is here, we
don't know what it is, it's not ours, we're studying it in secret,
but don't worry, it's not dangerous
What has changed is not the message but the receiving capacity of
the audience.
Ask yourself how a typical office worker in the
1950s would have responded if you had asked them whether they
believed in the existence of nonhuman terrestrial intelligence
interacting with humanity, whether they thought UAPs were real,
whether they had heard theories about the phenomenon being connected
to human consciousness or about certain groups being able to summon
these manifestations deliberately.
They would have found most of these questions
incomprehensible, not because they lacked intelligence but because
they lacked the conceptual vocabulary and the cultural context that
would make such questions meaningful.
They might have understood a question about
Martians or flying saucers, but even then their framework for
thinking about such things would have been shaped by the science
fiction of their era, by Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers,
by assumptions about space travel and interplanetary warfare that
now seem quaint.
Go back further still - imagine that same office worker attempting
to discuss the interplanetary hypothesis with a medieval peasant -
and the conceptual gap becomes unbridgeable.
The peasant's world contained wonders
and portents, angels and demons, signs from
God in the heavens, but it did not contain the conceptual
apparatus necessary to even formulate the question of whether
intelligent beings from other planets might be visiting Earth.
The shift from "flying saucers" to "UFOs" to "UAPs"
to "nonhuman intelligence" is not simply a change in vocabulary.
It represents a genuine evolution in
collective human consciousness, a gradual expansion of what is
thinkable, a slow normalization of possibilities that were once
literally unimaginable for most people. And this evolution has
occurred not through sudden revelations or dramatic
disclosures but through exactly the kind of repetitive,
frustrating, seemingly futile cycle of claims and denials that we
have been observing for decades.
Each iteration of the cycle, each new whistleblower, each new wave
of sightings, each new official report that simultaneously
acknowledges the phenomenon's reality while denying any definitive
conclusions about its nature - all of these serve to keep the
subject present in collective awareness, to make it familiar, to
chip away incrementally at the wall of reflexive dismissal that once
made serious discussion of these matters socially impossible.
Consider the famous 1952 press conference at which Major General
John Samford addressed the Washington sightings.
His statement included the following:
"We have received and investigated between
one and two thousand reports since 1947. The bulk of these we
have been able to explain satisfactorily.
However, there remains a certain percentage
that come from credible observers of relatively incredible
things. Regarding this remaining percentage, we have arrived at
only one firm conclusion: it contains no pattern that could be
associated with any conceivable threat to the United States.
We can state that the recent sightings are in
no way connected to any secret development of any agency of the
United States."
These words could have been spoken almost
verbatim by Pentagon officials commenting on the drone incidents of
2024.
The objects exist. We don't know what they
are. They're not ours. They don't appear to be dangerous...
Seventy years of investigation, and the official
position has not substantively changed.
Yet something has changed enormously:
the cultural and conceptual context
within which these statements are received.
When we recognize that Disclosure is not a
discrete event but a process - one that has been underway for
at least eight decades and possibly for centuries or millennia -
certain aspects of the phenomenon and its management begin to make
more sense.
The pattern of advancement and retreat, of
revelation followed by obfuscation, is not evidence of conspiracy or
incompetence or institutional inertia, though all of those factors
may play some role. It is the mechanism by which collective human
consciousness is gradually prepared to integrate a reality that may
currently exceed its capacity to process.
Two steps forward, one step back. Two steps
forward, one step back.
The ratio ensures that progress occurs, that the
direction of travel is unmistakably toward greater openness and
acceptance, while also ensuring that the pace remains manageable,
that no single revelation pushes too hard against the boundaries of
what people can absorb without experiencing what researchers have
termed "ontological shock" - the destabilizing experience of having
one's fundamental assumptions about the nature of reality suddenly
and violently overturned.
The question of why such a gradual approach would be necessary leads
us into more speculative territory, but some considerations are
worth noting.
Many witnesses to close encounters have reported
that their experiences were so profoundly alien to normal reality
that they struggle to articulate what occurred, not because of
trauma but because human language evolved to describe a human world
and lacks the vocabulary for what they perceived.
If the full truth about this phenomenon lies
significantly outside our current conceptual frameworks - if it
involves aspects of reality for which we literally do not have
adequate words or concepts - then immediate disclosure would not
merely be shocking but would be largely incomprehensible.
We would hear the words but would not be able to
form coherent meaning from them, in the same way that a person with
no background in physics cannot form coherent meaning from a lecture
on quantum field theory even though all the words are individually
familiar.
Gradual disclosure, in this view, is
not merely about managing shock but about building the
conceptual infrastructure necessary to eventually understand.
There is also the possibility that immediate,
incontrovertible disclosure could trigger responses that would be
catastrophic at a societal level.
Imagine the panic not of a population that
believes aliens have landed but of a population suddenly forced to
confront the fact that,
everything it believed about the nature of
reality, about humanity's place in the cosmos, about the
reliability of its institutions, about the continuity of its
history, was fundamentally incomplete or mistaken,
...and forced to confront all of this
simultaneously, with no preparation, no gradual adjustment, no time
to develop new frameworks that could make sense of the new
information.
Have you ever experienced a panic attack? I did.
The characteristic feature is the disjunction
between knowing, rationally, that nothing catastrophic is actually
happening and being completely unable to control the overwhelming
emotional response that insists otherwise.
What if disclosure at the level some imagine
- definitive, undeniable, total - would trigger something
analogous at a civilizational scale?
Not because people couldn't handle knowing
about nonhuman intelligence in the abstract but because the
specific reality is so far outside current human conception that
the psyche would rebel against it regardless of any rational
acceptance?
These speculations point toward something that
seems increasingly difficult to avoid:
the phenomenon itself appears to exhibit
intentionality regarding its disclosure.
This is perhaps the most uncomfortable inference
to draw, because it suggests that the question of when and how
humanity learns the truth is not entirely within human control.
Consider the fundamental observation that, despite all the
sightings, all the recovered materials (if recovered materials
exist), all the alleged secret programs and crash retrievals and
reverse engineering efforts, no definitive, publicly verifiable
proof has ever emerged.
Whistleblowers claim it exists.
Officials deny it.
The cycle repeats.
But the craft are never wheeled out.
The bodies are never displayed.
The technology is never demonstrated in ways
that would silence all skepticism permanently.
Either an extraordinarily successful conspiracy
has suppressed all such evidence for nearly eighty years across
multiple nations and thousands of individuals - a level of
operational security that would be unprecedented in human history -
or something else is going on.
The phenomenon appears to want to be seen but not proven. It
manifests in ways that are compelling to witnesses but frustratingly
ambiguous when subjected to rigorous scrutiny. It leaves traces that
are suggestive but never quite conclusive. It approaches without
ever fully arriving.
The six fishermen at Stralsund witnessed an
extraordinary spectacle while the other ten thousand inhabitants of
the city apparently noticed nothing.
Similar selectivity appears throughout the case literature: objects
visible to some observers but not to others who should have had the
same vantage point, radar returns that confirm visual sightings in
some cases but not in others, photographs and videos that capture
something anomalous but never quite enough to eliminate all
alternative explanations.
This pattern of selective manifestation,
of elusive presence, suggests a phenomenon that is
managing its own revelation, allowing itself to be glimpsed without
allowing itself to be captured, maintaining control over the pace at
which humanity becomes aware of its reality.
If this inference is correct, it has significant implications for
how we think about disclosure and those who might be managing it on
the human side.
The secret programs, the classified reports,
the congressional hearings, the alternating revelations and
denials,
...these may be less the autonomous decisions of
human gatekeepers than the human reflection of boundaries set by the
phenomenon itself.
The intelligence agencies and military branches accused of hiding
the truth may have far less latitude than their critics assume.
They may be permitted to hint, to
acknowledge, to gradually expand the boundaries of official
admission, but they may not be permitted to simply throw open
the doors, because such a gesture would exceed what the
phenomenon itself has chosen to reveal.
In this view, storming
Area 51 with torches and pitchforks
would be an exercise in missing the point entirely. The keepers of
secrets are not the fundamental obstacle. The phenomenon is its own
gatekeeper.
This is not to suggest that the phenomenon is necessarily benevolent
in any human sense of the term or that its gradual approach to
disclosure reflects concern for human wellbeing.
The historical and contemporary record contains
too many accounts of harmful encounters - physical injuries,
psychological trauma, what appears to be deliberate deception and
manipulation - to permit any confident assessment of benevolence.
Perhaps we are dealing with multiple forms of
nonhuman intelligence with varying attitudes toward humanity.
Perhaps moral categories developed within
human social contexts simply do not apply to intelligences that
evolved or arose under radically different conditions.
Perhaps what appears as careful, considerate
gradual disclosure to some observers looks more like extended
manipulation, a slow conditioning process whose ultimate purpose
remains opaque, to others.
These questions cannot be resolved with current
evidence.
What can be observed is the pattern: an approach
that is consistent, gradual, and apparently controlled, whether by
human institutions, by the phenomenon itself, or by some combination
of both.
What does all of this mean for those who
follow this subject closely, who have felt the frustration of
watching cycle after cycle play out without the definitive
resolution they hope for, who are tired of being told that the
truth is coming and then watching it recede once again into
ambiguity?
The counsel I would offer is to adjust
expectations to match the actual pattern we observe rather than the
fantasy of sudden revelation we have been culturally conditioned to
expect.
Disclosure is happening... It has been
happening for decades, arguably for centuries...
The average person today has access to concepts,
vocabulary, and publicly acknowledged information about this subject
that would have been unavailable or unthinkable to previous
generations.
The shift from ridicule to curiosity to serious
investigation that has occurred in mainstream media coverage over
the past decade alone represents an enormous change in collective
perception, even if no individual piece of evidence has definitively
proven anything.
We are watching a glacier move. The movement is
imperceptible on the scale of a human lifespan, frustrating for
anyone who wants to see the destination reached, but unmistakable
when measured against the longer historical record.
The child who stands before a mirror trying to watch themselves grow
will see nothing. The process is too slow, the increments too small,
the changes too gradual to register in real time. But if that child
takes a photograph and looks at it years later, the magnitude of the
transformation becomes undeniable.
We are in the position of that child. We cannot
perceive our own perceptual evolution while it is occurring. We can
only recognize it retrospectively, by comparing where we are now to
where we were, by asking how a question about nonhuman intelligence
would have been answered in 1950, in 1900, in 1665, and noting how
dramatically the range of permissible answers has expanded.
The frustration of those who feel they have been strung along for
years or decades, fed the same promises and the same
disappointments, is entirely understandable. But it may be a
frustration born of measuring progress against the wrong standard -
expecting a finish line when we are on a path, expecting an event
when we are in a process.
This perspective does not resolve the many questions that remain
open about the phenomenon's nature, origin, and intentions.
It does not explain why some encounters seem
to involve harm while others seem to involve something like
communication or education.
It does not tell us whether we are dealing
with
extraterrestrial visitors,
interdimensional beings,
something indigenous to Earth that has coexisted with humanity
for millennia, manifestations of consciousness in ways we do not
yet understand, or something else entirely that our current
conceptual apparatus cannot even formulate.
These questions may require further evolution of
that very apparatus before they become answerable - which is to say,
further disclosure, further gradual expansion of what is thinkable,
further iteration of the cycle that has been running since at least
the 1940s and probably much longer.
What this perspective does offer is a framework for understanding
why the dramatic press conference will never come, why no president
or prime minister will stand before cameras and announce that we are
not alone, why the hangar doors will not be thrown open and the
recovered craft displayed for all to see.
Not because such things are impossible in
principle but because they are not how this process works, not how
it has ever worked, not how collective human consciousness
transforms.
The announcement, if we want to call it that, will not be a moment
but an era, not a press conference but a generational shift, not a
revelation but a gradual dawning.
Looking back, we may not even be able to identify
precisely when certainty was achieved.
It will simply have emerged, become the default
assumption, entered the collective understanding as one more thing
that everyone knows without quite being able to remember when they
learned it.
Perhaps in two hundred years, the terminology
we use today - UAPs, nonhuman intelligence - will seem as quaint
and inadequate as "flying saucers" and "Martians" seem to us
now.
Perhaps our descendants will have a
completely different understanding of reality itself, one in
which the separation between human and nonhuman, between
physical and nonphysical, between here and elsewhere, has
dissolved into something we cannot currently imagine.
Perhaps they will look back at our era and see it as a
particular phase in a much longer journey, a time when certain
doors began to open that would eventually lead to
transformations we cannot predict.
The only thing that seems certain is that the
journey continues, that the perception changes, that what was once
unthinkable becomes thinkable and what is thinkable eventually
becomes known.
The disclosure is underway. It has been underway
for a very long time. It will continue long after we are gone. And
one day, without anyone being able to name the moment when it
happened, it will be complete.
Until then, we wait.
Not for an announcement but for the slow
turning of the world.
Not for proof but for readiness.
Not for them to reveal themselves but for us
to become capable of perceiving what has perhaps always been
here, waiting for us to develop the eyes to see it...
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