📸: DoD screenshot

So everyone knows that there is something completely out of the ordinary going on with the entire history of UFOs. You’d have to be completely naive to think that every single close encounter was a weather balloon, missile or bullshit explanation given by the Wovernment. We know this, the government knows we know this, however for some reason at this point they want to continue to pretend like the public doesn’t know there’s some crazy shit going on.

Via the Washington Post:

The U.S. Navy has drafted a procedure to investigate and catalogue reports of unidentified flying objects coming in from its pilots. But the service doesn’t expect to make the information public, citing privileged and classified reporting that is typically included in such files. 

Joe Gradisher, a spokesman for the office of the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Information Warfare, said in a statement that the Navy expects to keep the information it gathers private for a number of reasons.

“Military aviation safety organizations always retain reporting of hazards to aviation as privileged information in order to preserve the free and honest prioritization and discussion of safety among aircrew,” Gradisher said. “Furthermore, any report generated as a result of these investigations will, by necessity, include classified information on military operations.”

You’d figure for as long as people have been witnessing and documenting UFO activity on their own now, the Navy and the rest of the U.S. Government could at least open up a little bit on this.

Again, is some of it some kind of secret project being undertaken by the Government? Yeah probably but not all of it.

Anyways, the U.S. Government has really been following UFO activity since the 1950’s and even had a secret investigation where the Pentagon collected and analyzed “anomalous aerospace threats.” The name of this investigation was called the “UFO” Office and had regular funding dedicated to it up until 2012. However that didn’t stop the Advanced Aviation Threat Identification Program to continue operations.

As far as information ever being released, there still seems to be some kind of hope for that to one day happen. Luis Elizondo, an intelligence officer who ran AATIP before leaving the Pentagon told WAPO that despite the Navy continuing to keep a tight lid on things now, they may end up releasing some information in the future.

“If it remains strictly within classified channels, then the ‘right person’ may not actually get the information,” he said. “The right person doesn’t necessarily mean a military leader. It can be a lawmaker. It can be a whole host of different individuals.”