They made UFO disclosure a joke
The White House launched a new website this week at aliens.gov, and a large part of the UFO community is not happy about it.
For months, many believed that web address would finally become the government's disclosure portal. Instead, the page has nothing to do with extraterrestrials.
It uses the full look and language of UFO disclosure, opening with a slow scroll of text over falling stars and the words "they walk among us," before revealing itself as an immigration enforcement page complete with a live arrest counter and an ICE tip form.
The whole thing is built to mock the idea that the government has been keeping alien secrets.
Back in March, Congressman Eric Burlison of Missouri, who sits on the UAP Caucus, was asked about the address by the Ask a Pol team and guessed it might be about illegal aliens or the White House "trolling" the community. Both guesses proved correct.
The timing stings abroad too. According to The Japan Times, after the Pentagon released files with footage near Japan, Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara said Tokyo was analyzing the material with great interest, in close coordination with the United States. With allies treating the subject seriously, the stunt left many feeling the topic was reduced to a punchline.
Cristina Gomez reviews the latest UFO / UAP news and covers the White House aliens.gov launch and the backlash that followed, alongside reporting that the administration may be quietly preparing for disclosure. This update discusses the Pentagon UFO file releases, Japan's response, claims from Jeremy Corbell and Ross Coulthart, Congressman Eric Burlison, and former aviation security director Brett Fetterson on the rising UAP threat.
