Exploring the US Government’s UFO Disclosure Plan: Will Aliens be Revealed Soon? Unveiling the Senate’s Proposed Approach

The government may soon be compelled to disclose whether or not extraterrestrial beings have visited Earth within a specified timeframe of 300 days. This is due to new legislation known as the Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) Discloser Act, which was passed by the Senate in July and will form part of the National Defense Authorization (NDAA) for 2024. The Act aims to ensure that government offices release records pertaining to non-human intelligence and technologies to the public. President Joe Biden will have 90 days to appoint a nine-person Review Board that will be responsible for investigating each record and determining if it qualifies as a UAP that should be disclosed. Government agencies in possession of such records will be required to provide printed and digital copies to the Review Board, which will then have 180 days to conduct an investigation and publish their findings within 14 days. However, the president can choose not to disclose specific evidence if it is deemed to pose a threat to national security. How the process would work is detailed below:

Step One: The President forms the Review Board
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Senator Mike Rounds are leading an effort to force the government to disclose information about unidentified anomalous phenomena by introducing legislation inspired by the 1992 US law concerning records related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Schumer stated in July that it is time for the Americans to get answers about mysterious and unexplained objects, asserting their right to learn about technologies of unknown origins, non-human intelligence, and unexplainable phenomena. The president has the responsibility of selecting nine individuals to serve on the Review Board within 90 days of the Act’s enactment. Nominations will come from Senate and House leaders, the Secretary of Defense, the UAP Disclosure Foundation, the American Historical Association, and the National Academy of Sciences. These individuals must have no previous or current involvement with any legacy program or controlling authority related to the collection of such records. The Act defines legacy programs as all federal, state, and local government programs, as well as efforts by commercial industries, academia, and the private sector to study, exploit, or reverse engineer technologies of unknown origin or examine evidence of non-human intelligence predating the Act. The president also has the authority to decide whether specific evidence should be disclosed, with provisions for postponement of disclosure if it endangers military defense, intelligence operations, law enforcement, or foreign relations. The amendment was announced just days prior to a congressional hearing featuring testimony from three whistleblowers who claimed to have knowledge of secret government programs involving non-human technology.

Step Two: Governments must hand over UAP records
According to the Act, government offices have 300 days from the enactment date to provide the Review Board with UAP records. These offices include the president, the Department of Defense, all military branches, the Department of Energy, the Director of National Intelligence, the Library of Congress, and others. The Manhattan Project, which produced the first nuclear bomb, is also mentioned in the document. However, these agencies will retain ownership of the records, which they must preserve and secure. The head of each office is required to print a physical copy of each record and create a digital copy to be sent to the Review Board. The Act specifies that the federal government would have eminent domain over any recovered technologies of unknown origin, while private individuals or entities may possess biological evidence of non-human intelligence. UAPs are defined in the document as objects that can operate in outer space, the atmosphere, the ocean surfaces, or undersea, with performance characteristics and properties that were previously unknown based on accepted physical principles. Examples include flying discs, flying saucers, unidentified aerial phenomena, unidentified flying objects (UFOs), and unidentified submerged objects (USOs).

Step Three: Review Board investigates the evidence
The Review Board, comprised of nine individuals, will have 180 days to review each case involving UAPs. This group must include representatives from national security, foreign service, science/engineering, economics, history, and sociology. The Review Board’s purpose is to determine whether a record qualifies as an unidentified anomalous phenomena record and if it should be disclosed or postponed. These individuals also have the power to subpoena citizens for their testimony, records, and other relevant information. The Review Board and its members will terminate no later than September 30, 2030, unless Congress extends their mandate.

Step Four: Review Board publishes its findings
Upon completion of their determinations, the Review Board must notify the heads of government offices about their findings and publish the results within 14 days for the public to access. Senator Rounds emphasized the importance of preserving relevant documents and providing a central collection location and reputable review board to enhance the credibility of future investigations. This amendment emerged just days before a widely watched congressional UFO hearing that featured testimony from military whistleblowers, including David Grusch, who claimed that the US government has possessed UFOs since the 1930s and has been involved in secret back-engineering efforts, as well as a disinformation campaign. Grusch revealed that one UFO crash occurred in 1933 in Magenta, Italy, and was kept hidden by fascist dictator Benito Mussolini until 1944-1945 when Pope Pius XII informed the US about its existence. The hearing also featured Commander David Fravor, who had encountered the famous ‘Tic Tac’ UFO in 2004.

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Denial of responsibility! Vigour Times is an automatic aggregator of Global media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, and all materials to their authors. For any complaint, please reach us at – [email protected]. We will take necessary action within 24 hours.
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