Anonymous ID: cdbd9e Feb. 5, 2025, 11:27 a.m. No.22516381   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6414 >>6652 >>6946

UFO-believing congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna's cryptic message has everyone saying the same thing

Updated: 17:03 EST, 4 February 2025

 

A Florida congresswoman who believes some UFOs are of non-human origin has teased a major announcement in the coming days.

Rep Anna Paulina Luna (R) - who was privy to classified UAP files - posted she has 'an announcement next week that will impact the entire nation.'

Florida Congressman Jared Moskowitz (D) also commented on the post with a simple. 'I know.'

 

Americans filled the comments with a single idea that 'UAP disclosure is finally coming.' UAP, or Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, has replaced UFO to reduce stigma and encourage scientific study.

Florida Congressman Jared Moskowitz (D) also commented on the post with a simple. 'I know.'

 

DailyMail.com asked Moskowitz if Luna's statement was about UAP disclosure, to which the representative said he did not 'want to get ahead of her.'

While Luna has not provided further details about what is to come, she and Moskowitz were part of a secret UFO briefing last month to investigate claims from a high-profile whistleblower.

 

Reports suggested that members of Congress were left with little clarity about what the government knows about extraterrestrial life.

However, Luna, Moskowitz and the other lawmakers were banned by law for relaying what they heard during the closed-door briefing.

DailyMail.com has reached out to Luna for comment.

 

Luna is a member of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, which has been investigating claims about UFOs and carrying out historic hearings with military whistleblowers.

She and Moskowitz are also cosponsors of the UAP Transparency Act introduced in 2024, which requires the president to direct all federal agencies and departments to make all documents relating to UAPs available to the public within 270 days.

 

Luna's post, shared Monday, has more than 3,000 comments, many of which suggest the big announcement about UAPs.

One X user asked if she would be 'announcing it through the UAP Disclosure Act,' while many other comments just asked if it was 'aliens?'

Several X users raised the fact that Luna said the announcement would impact the world, questioning the idea of alien life being exposed.

 

'If it was related to UAP disclosure, it would have a worldwide impact. Therefore, this is not related to UAP disclosure,' shared UAP Juan.

While many people agreed with him, another user shared: 'Her responsibility is to our nation not the world.

'It would be inappropriate to assume world-changing things even if it was US disclosure. Other nations could have disclosed if they had the means too long ago.'

 

The secret briefing in January reportedly focused on claims by David Grusch who said the government has recovered non-human bodies from UFO crash sites.

Grusch - a former high-ranking intelligence official - was one of three military whistleblowers who testified under oath in 2023 that they had firsthand encounters or knowledge about secret government programs involving technology that is 'non-human.'

He claimed that the US has been in possession of UFOs since 'the 1930s' and has been secretly back-engineering them and carrying out a public disinformation campaign to prevent the details from leaking publicly.

 

Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) held the hearing with Luna and asked Grusch: 'Personally, have you heard anyone [has] been murdered?'

Grusch replied: 'I have to be careful answering that question. I directed people with that knowledge to the appropriate authorities.'

The Pentagon has denied the claims.

 

The January briefing was said to provide some evidence to support Grusch's testimony was factual, but lawmakers did not reveal exact details.

'This is the first real briefing that we've had that we've now made, I would say, progress on some of the claims Mr. Grusch has made,' Moskowitz told the New York Times.

'This is the first time we kind of got a ruling on what the I.G. thinks of those claims.'

 

Luna echoed the statements, saying lawmakers 'are continually being stonewalled.'

'We are authorizing money that is supposed to be spent on certain programs, and yet there is compartmentalization in which Congress doesn’t have access to oversight in those programs,' she added. 'And that’s a problem.'

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14359897/ufo-congresswoman-anna-paulina-luna-cryptic-message.html

https://x.com/RepLuna/status/1886560711628705836

Anonymous ID: cdbd9e Feb. 5, 2025, 11:42 a.m. No.22516486   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6488 >>6652 >>6946

https://www.inforum.com/news/the-vault/1966-encounter-prompts-challenge-come-on-out-and-tell-the-truth

https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010001-0.pdf

 

1966 encounter prompts challenge: ‘Come on out and tell the truth’

Today at 9:55 AM

 

MINOT, ND — On an early September morning in 1966, David Schindele tried to enjoy his morning coffee, but a news report caught his attention. Strange lights seen over Mohall, North Dakota.

The report disturbed him then as a lieutenant, a missileer and deputy commander overseeing the launch center controlling 10 nuclear-tipped Minuteman ICBMs, or intercontinental ballistic missiles, at Minot Air Force Base. He had heard of "flying saucers" a month before.

 

The Forum published a story about an August 25 sighting, featuring news from the Saturday Evening Post in an article entitled “Are Flying Saucers Real?” UFOs, officially called UAPs (unidentified anomalous phenomena) by the military, had been spotted flying around Minot Air Force Base.

“An Air Force officer in charge of a North Dakota missile crew suddenly found that his radio transmissions were being interrupted by static. At the time, he was sheltered in a concrete capsule some 60 feet below the ground,” the article stated.

 

While the officer attempted to fix the problem, guards on the surface reported seeing a glowing-red UFO in the sky, rapidly descending and ascending, which was picked up on radar at 100,000 feet, the article continued.

Unsettled, Schindele, who regularly underwent rigorous testing and security clearances and later retired as a captain, drove to his post at the launch center called November flight, three miles west of Mohall.

 

“I did my required inspections and went in through the back door of the facility, like I normally do, and right away, the site manager greeted me and said, ‘Did you hear what happened overnight?’” Schindele told Forum News Service during a recent interview.

“I said, no, I really didn't. He says, ‘Well, come with me.’ And he took me to the west-facing windows of the day room and he spread his arms out to show the breadth of this thing that they saw outside the security fence overnight,” Schindele said.

 

“This thing hovered above the ground and by the way he gestured with those arms I was guessing maybe 80 to 100 feet wide. He couldn't really distinguish what this thing looked like except it had bright flashing lights,” Schindele said.

The hovering UFO stayed in place for a few minutes, then moved to the main gate on the north side.

 

“Everybody was there, the cook, the site manager, the guards and so forth, and they were all looking at this thing. Nobody wanted to go outside and approach this thing, they were scared to death.

I could tell by the tones in their voices and the looks on their faces that it was an experience that they wish they didn’t have,” Schindele said.

Minutes later, the UFO vanished “in a flash,” Schindele said. “I was shaking, myself, to hear their stories and see the expressions on their faces.”

 

After Schindele’s commander finished with his debrief, they strapped on their .38 revolvers, and descended 60 feet to the control capsule, through two massive blast doors, where they would relieve the night crew and work their 24-hour shift.

“When we walked into the capsule, we looked at the launch control capsule and we saw all red lights … which indicated all missiles were off alert and were unlaunchable,” Schindele said.

“We’d never seen anything like that before,” said Schindele. “It was a real mystery. The technology that these things had was way, way beyond what we had. I knew this stuff was not of this world, and I held my tongue for 40 years.”

 

‘Disc’overy

The conspiracy theories behind the Air Force’s investigations into extraterrestrial or unidentified phenomena, including Project Sign, Project Grudge and Project Blue Book, arguably began with the Roswell Incident of 1947. A flying disc was seen by many near Roswell, New Mexico. A local rancher, W.W. Brazel, who found the debris, turned out to be a weather balloon, investigators reported.

“New Mexico rancher is surprised at all the excitement created by his ‘disc’overy,” a headline in the Clovis News-Journal read.

 

For the next 80 years, however, the phenomena of otherworldly bright lights, “flying saucers” moving at incredible speeds, even abductions and experiences like the one Schindele experienced, were wrapped in mystery and later stigmatized as the Air Force and the Central Intelligence Agency lied to the public as they tried to explain the unexplainable, according to a 1997 New York Times news story.

 

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Anonymous ID: cdbd9e Feb. 5, 2025, 11:42 a.m. No.22516488   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6490 >>6652 >>6946

>>22516486

Secrets piled up. Many who believed investigators were hiding the truth were denounced as mentally ill by leaders like the last chief officer of Project Blue Book, Lt. Col. Hector Quintanilla.

In the 1950s, news articles across the country reported that the Air Force claimed there was no such thing as “flying saucers” or extraterrestrial UFOs.

 

A 1964 report called "The UFO Evidence," published by National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena or NICAP, said its main goal was to conduct research on the topic and encouraged full reporting to the public.

Calling one faction who favored complete secrecy within the Air Force the “The Silence Group,” they published a scathing rebuke and claimed unidentified flying objects were real, rather than the result of the imagination.

 

“The U.S. Air Force is charged with the official investigation of UFOs, but has practiced an intolerable degree of secrecy keeping the public in the dark,” the report stated.

By 1969 when Project Blue Book was shut down, the Air Force had investigated more than 12,618 UFO sightings, concluding that 701 of the incidents were truly unexplainable, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and GODORT, or the Government Documents Round Table of the American Library Association.

 

The investigations led to one publicly-stated conclusion: “UFOs do not exist, and they’re harmless,” said Schindele, acknowledging that such statements have only led to public mistrust and more conspiracy theories.

In recent years, the CIA, the FBI, the Air Force and the Navy have legitimized leaked photographs and declassified some reports, but whistleblowers like Schindele and others insist the truth is still hidden.

 

‘Couldn’t figure it out’

Schindele and his commanding officer were in shock. Nearly two decades after America — arguably the most powerful nation on earth that ended World War II with an atomic bomb with an explosive yield of about 15,000 tons of TNT over Hiroshima — they both now stood helpless before 10 lifeless nuclear missiles with an explosive yield of more than 1.2 million tons of dynamite.

“We signed over the missile site, and my commander and I took over 10 missiles that we couldn't do anything with. We could query each missile.

 

We’d push a button and it would talk to us. And each missile said: ‘guidance and control system malfunction.’

This was really, really mysterious because we had a slew of other kinds of errors that the missiles could talk to us about,” Schindele said.

 

“But to have each missile tell us this, it meant there’s a certain thing that malfunctioned in the guidance system of the missile,” Schindele said.

They wondered if the control center had been hit by an electromagnetic pulse — which can damage or destroy electronic devices — and accompanies a nuclear explosion, but there had been no detonation, and nothing else in the capsule except for the missiles were affected, Schindele said.

 

“So how could a special signal get from our launch control center to each missile? Really, we were just — we couldn't figure it out,” Schindele said.

Eventually, circuit boards were replaced and the missiles were reset, Schindele said.

 

‘Never talk again’

Schindele, now 84 years old, knew what he and his missileers witnessed was “not of this world,” but for decades he has been bothered by the fact that Air Force investigators never asked him what happened.

“The Air Force has never talked to me. I'm always looking behind my back. I always have been. Things have happened, however, that I've wondered about, especially with the phones and my computers,” Schindele said.

 

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Anonymous ID: cdbd9e Feb. 5, 2025, 11:42 a.m. No.22516490   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6652 >>6946

>>22516488

Unlike others who had witnessed similar phenomena, Schindele was not forced to sign a non-disclosure agreement, but was told never to discuss the phenomena with anyone, including fellow soldiers, his wife or anyone else.

He decided to speak out after a fellow soldier, Robert Salas, broke his silence about a similar encounter at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana, which was eerily similar to his own.

Schindele wrote a book about his experience entitled “It Never Happened: US Air Force UFO Coverup Revealed,” and began speaking about his experience in the early 2000s.

 

Salas kept his silence for nearly 30 years, ending it in 1996 after the taboo of reporting UFOs thawed, and the Department of Defense now has a conduit for whistleblowers.

“There is no reason the Air Force can’t come out and admit that UFOs are real and that they’ve been here for a long time.

That they’ve investigated this stuff because, first of all, they wanted to back engineer the stuff they’ve captured from Roswell forward, and they’ve got a lot of this stuff,” Schindele said.

 

“The CIA is heavily involved in this. Everybody knows they’ve been hiding this thing away.

It was 58 years ago that I was involved in an incident, and my goodness, there are so many whistleblowers out there now. Come on out and tell the truth,” Schindele said before making a challenge to the Air Force.

 

“You can’t hold the secret anymore. They need to recognize how many people have been impacted by all of this and offer apologies to them.

At least, honor them as patriotic Americans, which they really are. So many people have been thrown into the trash.

If you want to get to the truth, get those NDAs dismissed,” Schindele said.

 

Declassified secret documents within Project Blue Book that Forum News Service found made no discoverable mentions of the 1966 incident that Schindele described, but other similar incidents across the Midwest occured later between the 1950s and 1968.

Large, round ships with a row of lights were landing frequently at Allen Lund’s farm near Missoula, Montana, in 1964, scaring wild game like deer and bear away.

“Every time the UFO is in the vicinity, their oil furnace lights itself … but strangest of all is the fact that their son … has told his parents of a man with whom he talks alone in the barn,” Project Blue Book reported.

 

Each time Lund’s son visited the man — whose name was unpronounceable — dogs would run into the house, the furnace would light itself and the television lost reception.

One of the most well known sightings of an anomalous phenomena occurred on August 27, 1979, when Marshall County Sheriff’s Deputy Val Johnson was struck by an unidentified flying object in his rust-colored squad car.

Johnson, who was on patrol near Warren, Minnesota, saw a bright light suddenly appear on State Highway 220, according to a news article published in the Minneapolis Star in 1979.

 

“One minute it was a mile and a half distant and the next minute it was right on top of me. It struck my vehicle. Everything got extremely, painfully bright.

There was no object I could see at all. I heard the sound of breaking glass. And that’s the last I remember,” Johnson told the Minneapolis Star.

He woke up in a ditch 30 minutes later with burns around his eyes. The windshield and one headlight of his 1977 Ford LTD were smashed, and both radio antennas were bent sharply back.

Strangely, his wristwatch and the dash clock were both 14 minutes slow.

 

The vehicle, dubbed the “UFO car,” is still on display at the Marshall County Historical Society Museum.

 

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Anonymous ID: cdbd9e Feb. 5, 2025, 11:49 a.m. No.22516539   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Plane Crazy speaker to talk about UFOs

February 5, 2025

 

The Plane Crazy Saturday event on Feb. 15 at the Mojave Air and Space Port promises to be out of this world.

Michael Schratt will be speaking about UFO crashes and retrievals in “a detailed and highly illustrated presentation,” according to organizers.

 

“It’s something people are interested in,” organizer Cathy Hansen said. “(Schratt) told me we’re in the epicenter of sightings.”

Schratt’s presentation will look at the work of the late ufologist Leonard Stringfield, who authored books and newsletters about alleged extraterrestrial debris and aircraft.

Stringfield’s sources included pilots, engineers, medical doctors, pathologists, high-level Pentagon officials and US Navy and Air Force personnel, who claimed to have had first-hand knowledge of the alleged UFO crashes, according to organizers.

 

Schratt is a private pilot and military aerospace historian who has lectured across the country about “mystery aircraft” and classified propulsion systems.

He has developed a number of sources of people with first-hand experience in classified “black programs,” including former Air Force pilots, retired Navy personnel and aerospace engineers with Top Secret clearances.

 

Schratt’s presentation will begin at 11 a.m. in the Board Room, in the Administration Building at the end of Airport Boulevard.

Seating is limited, and reservations may be made by emailing info@mojavemuseum.org. A donation to the Mojave Transportation Museum Foundation is requested.

 

Plane Crazy Saturday is the monthly gathering of aviation enthusiasts hosted by the foundation.

The free, family-friend­ly educational event feat­ures a flight line filled with aircraft of varied types and vintages, avail­able for visitors to see up close.

 

The event will run from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Ad­mis­sion to the flight line with its displays is through the Voy­ager restaurant, in the Administration building.

Dogs and other an­im­als, other than ser­vice animals, are not per­mitted on the flight line.

 

https://www.avpress.com/news/plane-crazy-speaker-to-talk-about-ufos/article_ad779462-e378-11ef-b5eb-771c3e3fecae.html

https://www.youtube.com/@michaelschrattofficial

https://mojavemuseum.org/plane-crazy-saturday/

Anonymous ID: cdbd9e Feb. 5, 2025, 11:54 a.m. No.22516584   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6603 >>6648 >>6652 >>6667 >>6946

PBD Podcast - “BIGGER Than The Nuclear Bomb” - Dr. Steven Greer REVEALS Suppressed Energy Tech & Biden UFO Truths

February 5, 2025

 

Patrick Bet-David sits down with Dr. Steven Greer for a jaw-dropping conversation that could change EVERYTHING you thought you knew about classified projects, black sites, and UFO technology.

Dr. Greer claims insiders from deep within the intelligence world are finally coming forward—with evidence that could shake up the global power structure.

Are world leaders truly in control, or is there something FAR MORE POWERFUL operating behind the scenes?

What’s buried so deep in the U.S. government that even presidents aren’t allowed to see it? Watch now before this information gets buried!

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvXz0ynCqJQ