Yesterday’s UFO whistleblower thunderclap from The Debrief raises so many questions, it’s hard to even know how to process the inferences.

Umm, still using towels to try to clean up after the accident I had during Monday’s explosive brainstroke from The Debrief:

An inside man with cred out the wazoo finally spills the beans about the recovery of technology apparently manufactured by nonhuman intelligence? Nope, never saw this one coming. And if the story pans out, I’m already flashing back to that fateful decision made by leaders of The Greatest Generation years before I was born. And I wonder: Did the original framers of the Cold War information lockdown, the founding fathers of the perhaps unintended war on democracy – all long dead by now – have any idea just how long the secret could be hoarded? Could they have even imagined?

In January 1948, just six months after the military quickly retracted its press release about having confiscated a crashed “flying disk” outside Roswell, the Air Force quietly commissioned the first official assessment of the global UFO phenomenon. By autumn of ’48, scientists working under the code name Project Sign completed what was reportedly titled “Estimate of the Situation.” According to historians, the consensus was that the encounters involved “interplanetary” technology, and the report was forwarded to USAF Chief of Staff Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg. But Vandenberg allegedly ordered the document destroyed in a move that would demoralize and stigmatize generations of researchers working within and outside the system.

Monday’s Debrief report – filed by Leslie Kean and Ralph Blumenthal, who broke the story of the Pentagon’s secret UFO/UAP program for the New York Times in 2017 – puts a potential full stop to the 20th-century’s collapsing status quo. That is, if incendiary allegations from one David Charles Grusch manage to hold up against what’s sure to be white-hot scrutiny.

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