In what former Pentagon intelligence official Chris Mellon calls a "sea change," the Navy (and apparently the Air Force) is "updating and formalizing the process" for aviators to report "unexplained aerial phenomena." The matter-of-fact article by Bryan Bender quotes the Navy as saying they investigate "each and every report" anyway. At the same time, the article emphasizes the institutional hindrances towards reporting anomalous encounters; notes the existence of "a number of reports" which some believe pose a potential national security threat; and acknowledges the pressures from increased interest by "Congressional members and staff."
The Washington Post's Deanna Paul follows with
How Angry Pilots Got the Navy to Stop Dismissing UFO Sightings. Featuring an off-point 16-month-old video, the article nonetheless adds a few official quotes to the issue. "Sea change" is the exact phrase Billy Cox uses of the larger attitude in the Pentagon toward the Great Taboo (UFOs) in
Elizondo's Call to Action. Billy covers former Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program head Luis Elizondo's appearance at last month's Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies conference in Huntsville, Alabama. Billy has much to say about the potential ramifications of this apparently New Situation. Brett Tingley is also a tad uneasy, as he reports that the
US Navy Patents a Triangular Aircraft Which Alters 'The Fabric of Our Reality'. Elements in Tingley's piece about mysterious patents relating to far-out technology resonate with some of Lue Elizondo's points in the Billy Cox article. (WM)
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from THE ANOMALIST https://politi.co/2Zwbrn2
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