Re:
Jordan Sather, Edgar Mitchell, Michael Schratt, Giorgio Tsoukalos and all the rest of that community
I've listened & read about all that for years, mostly for entertainment. Anything's possible, I reckon.
But it's the letters between the late Ben Rich (Lockheed-Martin) and his friend John Andrews that stuck with me.
https:// www.gaia.com/article/ben-rich-lockheed-martin-and-ufos
John Andrews was a Lockheed engineer and personal friend of Ben Rich. Andrews expressed his own personal opinion that UFOs existed in a letter he wrote to Rich, asking Rich to share his own opinion. Andrews claimed that Rich responded that he believed "there are two types of UFOs, the ones we build, and the ones they build…I am a believer in both categories. I feel everything is possible. Many of our man-made UFOs are Un-Funded Opportunities.” Rich underlined the “UFO” in “Un-Funded Opportunities,” but gave no explanation.
Rich continued, stating that most “biomorphic” aerospace designs were inspired by Roswell spacecraft. Rich wrote that he believed the American public “could not handle the truth” about UFOs and ETs. However, he changed his mind toward the end of his life and felt that keeping the secret could be more of a danger to “citizens’ personal freedom under the United States Constitution than the presence of off-world visitors themselves.”
Ben Rich’s “Deathbed Confession” James Goodall, aerospace journalist and an in-demand public speaker, became friends with Ben Rich. Goodall states that he spoke with Rich about 10 days before Rich died. The conversation took place over the phone while Rich was in the USC Medical Center in Los Angeles where Goodall claims that Rich said, “Jim, we have things out in the desert that are fifty years beyond what you can comprehend. If you have seen it on Star Wars or Star Trek, we’ve been there, done that, or decided it wasn’t worth the effort. They have about forty-five hundred people at Lockheed Skunk Works. What have they been doing for the last 18 or 20 years? They’re building something.”
What do I think? Maybe. I know for a fact (family) that Lockheed started work on the stealth program as far back as the early 1960's. Think of how many decades passed before we learned about that. That was 50 years ago. What do they have now? Who am I to even guess? No reason to worry about it for now.