Consider what we have seen since late 2017:
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The New York Times and Politico articles of December 2017 that announced the Pentagon had secretly investigated UFOs via the AATIP program.Those same articles and coverage that told us about the Tic Tac UFO encounter in November 2004.The release of three videos showing apparent UFOs recorded by the U.S. Navy.The report from Bigelow Advanced Aerospace (BAASS) describing the highly advanced capabilities of the so-called Advanced Aerospace Vehicles (AAV), otherwise known as UFOs, in connection to the encounters by the U.S. Navy of the so-called Tic Tac UFO and presumably other encounters. This was publicized by journalist George Knapp of KLAS in Las Vegas.The lecture by TTSA member Dr. Hal Puthoff during 2018 about the so-called metamaterial and its amazing properties, which hinted at antigravitic effects in relation to very high terahertz frequencies. He also (strongly) hinted that no one knew how to make this material. That inevitably begged the question as to whether this was indeed an extraterrestrial artifact.A second article in 2019 by the New York Times detailing the extraordinary UFO encounters by the U.S. Navy in 2014 and 2015 off the eastern coast of the U.S. by the USS Roosevelt.The television show Unidentified on the History Channel, now about to start its second season, which Navy UFO encounters in detail for a totally mainstream audience.The various announcements by the U.S. Navy over the last year that it's still been encountering UFOs (or UAP or AAVs). Also that the service has revised and updated its protocols for encountering them.The U.S. Navy's admission in 2019 that the three videos released via the auspices of TTSA were, in fact, legitimate and did indeed depict unknown aerial vehicles. Some people had been openly skeptical about these videos, but incredibly, the Navy said they are legit.The announcement that TTSA will be working with the U.S. Army to conduct joint studies of advanced materials of potentially unknown origin.[/ol]As one insider said to me recently, each one of these new developments constitutes "more toothpaste out of the tube." And once it's out, it's not going back in.
These are serious admissions, all of them. Not everyone fully realizes it, but these revelations are not going away. No matter what happens to the future of TTSA, whether they continue their existence or come to a dead stop (the latter is entirely possible), the recent admissions ought to be sufficient to provide leverage for future admissions to be pried out.
Make no mistake. These admissions have never been made before, at least not this many, nor in such a short period of time. It's true that during the 1950s, the U.S. military admitted that there were unknown objects being tracked and encountered, but there was never an admission that those objects were anything other than (most likely) misidentified mundane objects. What's happening now is different.
It's true that neither the Trump White House nor the U.S. Senate or House has moved to push the matter further. There are no official investigations or disclosures relating to UFOs, and it's entirely possible that neither the White House nor Congress will initiate any in the coming decade. But that doesn't mean things won't continue to change.
What is happening now is a speeding up of history. There is no single person or group that is running this process. It's happening because, in the most fundamental sense, it has to happen. Our technology has gone through a revolution. The way we communicate has gone through a revolution. Yes, there are always new measures being introduced to control and misdirect public inquiry. But the main current can't be stopped. The reality of unknown, inexplicable, incredible-performance craft has been going on for too long to be ignored forever.
The time is near. Whether we are ready or not doesn't matter. The train has left the station and is en route.
Richard Dolan