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An Ex-CIA Scientist Tells Joe Rogan the US Has 'More Than 10' Recovered UFOs, Some of Which are 'Donations'

I don't mean to step in the bear trap of discussing partisan politics, but we've just passed the historic of any new presidential administration, which is the First 100 Days. The period of time in which FDR implemented much of the New Deal agenda he had campaigned on and completely transformed the federal government. Permanently. 

And while Trump has been extremely proactive in his own right - to the dismay of half the country and the elation of the other half - there's still a lot of things we were told we could expect by now that we haven't gotten. Big promises were made that haven't been delivered on. Not yet, anyway. I mean, who thought on Election Day that by now the Commander-in-Chief would've addressed issues no one was talking about - like Mt. McKinley, the Gulf of America, annexing Greenland, making Canada a state, reopening Alcatraz - while we've still only gotten a few crumbs about the assassinations of the '60s and the Epstein client list? I get we can't have everything. But it's a matter of where your priorities lie. Why not give the taxpayers the information they want first, and then turn your attention to places of interest on the map once you've handled the big ticket items. 

And there is no bigger ticket item than the UFO/UAP issue. The assassinations, and even the Epstein list, speak to who we've been as a nation for the last half century. What those flying objects are could very well speak to the nature of humanity and our place in the cosmos. But aside from a few more congressional hearings that have yielded very little, we've gotten jack squat out of government officials.

Which brings us the latest claims. These coming from a former government official. And boy howdy, they are something else:

Daily Mail - A former CIA scientist left Joe Rogan in awe after claiming to know the amount of secret alien tech in America's possession.

Dr Hal Puthoff, a physicist and electrical engineer who worked on the government's psychic spy and UFO research programs, revealed on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast that the US military has recovered more than 10 crashed UFOs since the 1940s.

The 88-year-old, who was briefly connected to the Church of Scientology and has openly discussed his belief in the existence of extraterrestrials, was the former project leader for the CIA's remote viewing program - which taught mentally gifted individuals how to psychically see distant objects and targets with their minds.

Just to interject for a second here, so Dr. Puthoff is a cross between Tom Cruise and Matthew Modine's character in Stranger Things. And before you scoff at any reference to a CIA remote viewing program, it very much existed. The program anyway, called Project Stargate. Whether remote viewing actually works, your guess is as good as mine. But there are well documented reports of the US and the Soviets doing these very experiments. Famously, one test subject, named Pat Price, told his project leaders he saw inside Mount Hayes in Alaska. And what he found in there was a secret high tech base operated by humans and aliens. Price would later die of "a heart attack" in Las Vegas. The quotation marks are because he was reportedly in excellent health. We'll never know for sure. Because no autopsy was ever done. 

Now back to Puthoff:

He added that even more of these 'non-human craft' have allegedly been recovered by other nations in isolated deserts and from the oceans around the world, with more possibly hiding out in alien bases underwater or near quite mountain ranges.

However, not all of the recovered ships were crashed wrecks. …

'Some of them are donations to help us accelerate our forward motion,' Puthoff told Rogan on Thursday.

'They donate something here, something in China, something in Russia, and see who is best at moving forward just as part of their ISR [intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance] evaluation of us,' he added.

  

He then went on to confirm that the Roswell crash did, in fact, happen as it was originally reported. Meaning before the Feds rolled up and coerced/threatened everyone change their story and lie about it being a weather balloon. 

And as to why all the secrecy? He explains:

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In 2004, Puthoff was recruited by Navy officials to take part in a secret project in Washington DC that he claims has convinced the country's leaders to never reveal what they know about extraterrestrials. …

[His] group came up with around 60 different items, ranging from the stock market to religions, that might be affected by the disclosure of alien life.

'We had to go give it a score from plus 9 to minus 9 as to how intense the effect would be and whether it's positive or negative,' the scientist explained.

It turned out that Puthoff's group and every other group in the secret project came back with the same result, telling the public would ultimately have a negative impact on society. 

Then he dumped a bucket of rhetorical ice water over any remaining hope we'll ever get to the bottom of what the government knows:

'So the outcome of that exercise was, if you're thinking about disclosure, forget it,' Puthoff declared.

So according to Puthoff, the Feds wants us to remain in the dark permanently. For the same reason governments have been giving for lying to the public since the dawn of civilization. It's … for our own good. Because if we knew extraterrestrials are visiting us, the Dow Jones would lose points and attendance at the local Episcopal church would fall from 15 to an even dozen. So better to keep us blissfully ignorant until the sun goes nova. We're not entitled to know until the US Navy decides we are. Great arrangement. I just don't recall anyone ever asking if that was OK with the people who pay for all those carrier battle groups and disposable $60 million fighter jets:

While you can try to dismiss Dr. Puthoff's comments as just the rantings of an old man, I think just the opposite. The man is 88 years old. Which means he's outlived the actuarial table. He's standing in his own grave, which gives him the one freedom no one can take away. Which is the right to say whatever the actual fuck he feels like. He can be as truthful as it suits him. And has no reason to lie. I mean, it's not like he's starting a podcast of his own or working on a book at this point. He's just a man who knows it all, unencumbered by any concern about what'll happen two years from now if he spills the beans now. 

So I guess we've learned a few things from him. UFOs are real. Extraterrestrials are visiting us on the regular. They're not hostile. They want to see if we can figure out how to use their toys. And we'll know anything about any of this if the spy agencies and Pentagon have anything to say about it. And they do. Good to know.