So, more UFO files.
More uncertainty and ambiguity.
The May 22nd release, much like the May 8th release, contains some genuinely interesting stuff, as well as some much less interesting stuff.
I covered the first lot of files somewhat here from May 8th: and discussed the subject broadly. So I won’t repeat the same points, questions or arguments here.
There’s also, again, some things being released that appear to have already been in the public domain – despite all the continuing insistence that this is all brand new data being shared with the public.
It’s also worth pointing out that many other countries have already made their UFO data public, some of them doing it years ago. The difference is that they never made such a massive deal about it or tried to hype it up so much: they just did it.
In fact, some of them never had any transparency issues in the first place: this business of cover-ups or disinformation programmes concerning UFOs has been largely an American issue, which is telling in and of itself.
By the way, the ‘One of the Best UFO Captures Ever Filmed’ I referred to isn’t from the newly released files. But I’ll get to that at the end.
One thing I’ve actually somewhat enjoyed is watching Neil deGrasse Tyson being a mixture of bemused and sceptical about all of this. I haven’t always been comfortable with him, mostly because he sometimes seems too dismissive of any unorthodox thinking: but the media’s go-to scientist has been almost trolling the UFO files and the accompanying hype.
He described some of the latest files as “a bit misleading“. He was particularly dubious about NASA related files being included in these releases, such as the stuff from the Apollo missions, saying “Those Nasa documents were never classified, and what the astronauts were seeing would have a complete, full, rational explanation.”
What Tyson is essentially saying is ‘bring out the aliens’ or stop messing around.
And that’s kind of the point. It’s all of this deliberate ambiguity, as I said last time, that’s annoying. They’re throwing all this stuff at people, but essentially saying nothing.
It’s essentially the same thing they did with the Epstein files: which was another case of ‘flooding the zone’ with a vast amount of data, but saying nothing – while continuing to hide the stuff they still want to hide.
To again highlight the dubious nature of some of these released files, one of the videos from the May 22nd release claims to show the shooting down of an unknown object by a US fighter jet.
The website’s description tells us this happened over Lake Huron in February 2023.
That’s exactly around the time that alleged Chinese spy balloons were shot down – including specifically near Lake Huron.
Remember all that? The Chinese balloons (or at least that’s what the official explanation was) being seen over various locations in the US, which the US media kept hyping up as mysterious UAPs?
I mean, yes, I guess they were technically ‘UAPs’ (as in Unidentified Aerial Phenomena): but that’s not what the news outlets had been implying in their decidedly speculative coverage at the time.
Also, it’s strange that the Department of War has included this particular footage in its latest tranche of files when they must know it’s a Chinese balloon.
Unless the Chinese balloons story was a cover for something else. But now we’re just going round in circles.
At least one picture I saw (of three mysterious lights filmed from the lunar surface) actually turns out to have been already available on a NASA archive online. Except the original was a higher resolution image and the version released by the War Department was lower resolution.
Again, I’ll reiterate what I’ve said previously: until these files include information on things like whatever it was that happened at Roswell in 1947, or the Washington DC UFO invasion in 1952 (which I referenced in the previous post), or things like the Phoenix Lights mass-witness event, it’s obvious that there are still key things being omitted or avoided.
The point I keep making is that there are far more interesting incidents and testimonies out there than the kind of grainy, ambiguous clips and images being drip-fed to people with these files.
Put it this way: it’s hard to get excited by vague footage of ambiguous objects being presented to us by the US military when an alien craft supposedly landed outside a school in Zimbabwe and was witnessed by dozens of children and teachers, who also claim to have watched the non-human occupants and actually interacted with them.
That’s a very well known case, if you’ve never heard of it. The witnesses’ testimony regarding that incident has remained consistent for decades.
I’m not stating one way or the other whether an incident like that was real or not (although this one’s very difficult to debunk): I’m just using it to illustrate how comparatively uninteresting and uninformative these US government files are so far.
We’ll keep coming back to this subject in the near future: because it’s obviously a major topic right now, and because, honestly, it’s more fun than talking about things like the mass murder in Gaza or the generally dystopian direction we seem to be headed in.
And because there’s clearly something big unfolding here: and I’ve been following this subject since I was a kid, and I feel like we’re reaching some kind of conclusion.
Whether that conclusion is real or staged is another matter.
I’ll be posting over the weekend a much larger article, covering some of the very weird things being said and implied right now, including the strange conflation of UFOs with demons.
But just to highlight again the comparatively uninteresting (and unclear) nature of these videos being released by the US military, I’ll share here a famous UFO video from 2008. This is a compilation of footage filmed by different observers near the Sea of Marmara in Kumburgaz, Turkey.
A number of organisations, including Turkey’s National Council for the Study of Science and Technology, studied the footage and no investigations suggested any evidence of fakery. The incident, which was witnessed by multiple observers, was thus left an unresolved mystery.
But contrast the clearness and the duration of this Turkish footage to the short, blurry clips typically being shared in the current UFO files being released in the US.
I’m not commenting here on what this is being shown here (though I should say I saw a version of this footage years ago that included a zooming in that seemed to show large headed figures inside the craft: I can’t quite tell if this compilation is showing that): I’m just highlighting the fact that it seems unlikely the US military doesn’t have any equally clear and sustained footage of its own to share.
If it does, it seems to be holding it back still. Which, again, raises questions about why they’re releasing files at all.
The Current UFO/Drone ‘Mystery’ is Now on Steroids: What the F**k is Happening…?

