Complete Idiot said:It seems like we are ALWAYS on the verge of disclosure, as if those saying something big is coming all want you to tune into a channel, follow an account, read a book, "stay tuned".TCTTS said:
And here's full News Nation report from yesterday…A former U.S. intelligence officer claims a classified program has recovered UFO wreckage of “nonhuman origin.” @rosscoulthart and @BrianEntin report on why the Air Force veteran is taking his claims to Congress: https://t.co/kmQh5lCRiM #VargasReports pic.twitter.com/cEfNumKSwN
— NewsNation (@NewsNation) June 6, 2023
That said, much more of the Grusch interview itself is set to be released later this week (seeing as seven hours total were recorded over two days).
I don't really get that vibe at all with Coulthart, as I've never once heard him say we're on the verge of disclosure. In fact, he's usually pretty pessimistic in that regard. I do agree that the teasing of "something big" coming can get a little annoying, but Coulthart is one of the few who has actually delivered both times he's teased as much. The first was Grusch and the second was this new whistleblower (Coulthart had previously said that early 2025 was going to be eventful).
Also, Coutlhart is an official correspondent for NewsNation, and NewsNation is the only reputable news network willing to cover UAP/NHI to the extent they do. To that end, I don't really know how else they're supposed to play this? Especially considering they're using nearly the exact same playbook as they did with Grusch (tease the interview earlier in the week, then release the full interview a few days later), which worked incredibly well and helped put them on the map. NewsNation still needs the ratings, though, and this is one of the few edges they can use to gain them/separate themselves, so why not?
Otherwise, how are people like Coulthart supposed to support themselves in this venture/pursuit, or get the word out to the masses? I don't understand why there's an expectation that reporting on the UAP/NHI topic is somehow supposed to be some kind of pure, non-profit effort? Journalists like Coulthart devote their livelihoods to uncovering whatever truth is out there, and not everyone can be a Jesse Michels or Chris Ramsay type and build a huge YouTube following - one that pays the bills - from scratch. That's a young man's game. Even though Coulthart does have a YouTube channel as well, it's not nearly as robust, so for someone like him, teaming up with NewsNation simply makes way more sense. But in doing so he has to play by their network/TV landscape rules, which means maximizing ratings whenever/however they can.