Science fiction stories about “alien” invaders are often political allegories for anxieties around immigration. Now, a government website depicts non-citizens as extraterrestrials.
The White House launched a website teasing new information on extraterrestrials this week, but it actually delivers immigrant arrest data.
The White House‘s new Aliens.gov site is not a long-awaited step toward UAP disclosure. It is an immigration enforcement dashboard dressed in science fiction cosplay. And the launch fits a broader ...
Neil deGrasse Tyson calls on the government to just show the alien, saying Americans are ready for disclosure after years of hearings and UAP files.
The site compares undocumented immigrants to extraterrestrials, refers to people as "it," and says "they do not belong here." ...
Lawmakers called on the White House to grant immunity to whistleblowers who come forward with UFO information.
The White House launched a website teasing new information on aliens, but it actually delivers immigration arrest data, including hundreds in Kansas.
This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. There is a White House website built like a 1990s conspiracy thriller. Across the top, one ...
A couple of months back, we noted—along with several other amateur government weirdness observers—that the official online infrastructure for the United States government had registered an “aliens.gov ...
Neil deGrasse Tyson challenges recent UAP disclosures, urging officials to provide concrete evidence of extraterrestrial life, highlighting the gap between transparency claims and actual proof.
“Disclosure” has become a cult word. It shouldn't be, since all it means, technically, is to reveal something. But the new wave of alien conspiracy theorists have made “disclosure” into a teasingly ...
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