I’ve been waiting for ET & UFO disclosure for most of my life now.
I’m old enough (feels weird to say) to remember when Obama was supposed to disclose ETs circa 2009. Since the days of perusing the Above Top Secret forum in high school, whispers of official “disclosure” have always placed it at right around the corner, a sort of saving grace for those in the UFO community, a foretold redemption for those whose friends and family might view them as crazy.
Since then, I’ve learned that disclosure is very much an individual, often painful journey of discovering truth within yourself, deconstructing layers of old belief systems to perceive more of reality. We don’t need to wait for the government to tell us what is real. Nor should we care what any other person thinks, for that matter.
I’ve also learned that there are many people in this world who will not believe anything unless it comes from an “official” external source, even though these same sources — whether governments, mainstream media outlets, or church leaders — have been participating in the deceitful coverup and perception manipulation for decades, often in conjunction with the intelligence agencies.
For most of these people, some sort of official acknowledgement is needed that we are not alone in the universe — that there are beings here visiting from other planets, other dimensions, possibly even from beneath our feet. We have been swimming about a tiny fish tank, made to believe it was our whole reality.
In general, I see two categories of people whose belief systems will be shattered by a hypothetical disclosure.
The first are your classic dogmatic religious people, who are made to believe that beings from other planets or dimensions, or anything outside their narrow box, are demonic. I’m not saying that there isn’t a “demonic” element to our world (it would explain a lot, actually). But the worldviews of a surprising amount of people in the online Christian community have devolved to the point where they believe that space and other planets are “fake” (in my mind, a purposeful psychological operation in conjunction with flat earth theory), a perfect way to continue the 80-year coverup and get people arguing over nonsense.
Open-minded Christians (and other religious people) who can see that ETs, UFOs, and interdimensional beings are mentioned everywhere in holy texts, even littered throughout religious artwork/iconography (a few examples of which I’m attaching), will have a much easier time. They will accept the obvious truth that God made a vast universe filled with a multitude of intelligent expressions. Anything less (space is fake) is a disservice to his creation.

The second category are militant atheists and devotees of scientism (also called philosophical materialism) who take pride in extreme, unbalanced skepticism and “trust the science” to the point where it becomes literally another religion. These people subscribe to the faith-based tenet that life is a cosmic accident, and that this miracle of creation emanated from absolutely nothing, a belief system in which you would have to take literally everything for granted — including your very consciousness.
Devotees of scientism or self-identified “skeptics” can be equally if not more close-minded and fanatical as the religious folk they look down upon. Because life and consciousness are random, isolated byproducts of a dead universe, rather than part of a vast and complex universal intelligence, most devotees defend the idea that we are alone on this planet — or at least have never been visited — and dismiss UFO believers as crazy. It is also true that many UFO contactees describe experiences of non-local consciousness, or psychic or telepathic phenomena, which would further violate these devotees’ narrow belief system.
Out of any demographic in a normal human household, dogs will have it the easiest. Because they have no belief system. (Although they might freak out when the feline ETs finally decide to show themselves.)
To end this essay more positively (thanks for reading), although I’ve been waiting over half my life — a blink of an eye, really — I do recognize that we have made much progress, and something about this time feels different. There are rumors of pastors being prepared for imminent disclosure. There are people in our government speaking with certainty about the ET reality, even the hybrid program. My favorite politicians right now (and I hate politicians) are anyone who pushes for truth and transparency to the American people, regardless of political party (Luna in particular deserves a shoutout, as do Burchett and Burlison).
Plus, no matter what you think about Trump, I think everyone can agree that he is as much of an egotist, and overall loose cannon, to want to be the “one” who discloses.
Be skeptical yet open. Watch out for controlled narratives. Although in my estimation, there will be a slow rollout of truth in these coming days, months, and years to make it palatable to most people. My only wish is for my son to grow up in an open and transparent world, rather than the confusing one I was raised in which could better be described as a control matrix, on a planet sequestered in a tiny corner of the galaxy, whose populace have been lied to about nearly everything.
As consciousness rises, that spell is breaking. Any rigid belief system will be blown right open, and that can only be a good thing. In the meantime, do away with the mental, egoic boxes and strive to see reality as it is.
(This article was originally posted on Facebook on 5/8/2026)
