Will it prove to be much ado about something, or not much after all? Stay tuned.
For more than a year now, segments of the public have been awaiting a much-hyped government “disclosure” of UAP files. That acronym stands for “unidentified anomalous (or aerial) phenomena,” a more scientific, dignified, and apparently less superstitious term than “UFOs.”
Last week, President Donald J. Trump, who has long promised to release them, told a group of supporters at an event hosted by conservative group Turning Point USA, “We found many very interesting documents, I must say, and the first releases will begin very, very soon so you can go out and see if that phenomenon is correct.”
Will this “disclosure” coincide or immediately follow the planned mega-release of a new Steven Spielberg movie about aliens called “Disclosure Day”?
Another ad pictures a nun:
Creepy?
That it promises to be.
Trump has noted that the issue is “complicated,” which some have taken to mean it involves military secrets, perhaps the reverse-engineering of crashed “flying saucers” (like the alleged one at Roswell, New Mexico, and before that, in 1933, in Italy, supposedly taken into custody by the Vatican after the fall of Mussolini and then handed over to the U.S. for study)
One might also take the word “complicated” to imply a spiritual—demonic—side to aliens, a belief reportedly held by some in the Department of Defense. Among the so-called aliens are “reptilians,” which indeed puts one in mind of the dragon.
If and where they come, pray them away.
Only in Jesus do we discern the real truth of so much swirling out there. (See the current “Special Report.”)
Meanwhile, reports Fox News, the White House and FBI are investigating the mysterious disappearances or deaths of at least eleven American scientists with ties to nuclear and space research. At least two of them had been involved also with UFO investigations, including at Wright-Patterson Air Base near Dayton, Ohio, where rumors have long held that the alleged crashed saucer from Roswell, New Mexico, was analyzed. [See footnote]
Others cite secret research at places like “S-4” near Area 51 in Nevada and Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico. Corporations also supposedly have been involved, including Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and EG&G Special Services.
How much, if any, is actually extraterrestrial? Is it indeed in the realm of the spiritual? Or is some of it disinformation from intelligence agencies covering up secret weapons research?
Our question: Mr. President, will proper spiritual context (and protection) be offered if it is true, and if it is, is it true that a previous president, Dwight Eisenhower, once met and made a secret pact with aliens in New Mexico, as has long been claimed?
Again, stay tuned. We are in rollicking times, with no dearth of drama.
[resources: Michael Brown’s Lying Wonders, Strangest Things and Special Reports]
[Footnote as far as those scientists: The disappearances and deaths have sparked intense debate across New Mexico, California, and Washington D.C. Since 2023, at least eleven individuals with deep ties to nuclear deterrence, aerospace engineering, and unidentified anomalous phenomena research have either vanished or been killed under suspicious circumstances.
[New Mexico, the historical heart of the Manhattan Project and home to Roswell, has become the focal point of the current mystery. In February 2026, Major General (Ret.) William Neil McCasland disappeared from his home in Albuquerque. McCasland’s profile is particularly significant; as the former commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), he oversaw highly classified space and defense programs. Notably, his past command was based at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, a facility long associated with UFO lore. McCasland reportedly vanished without his phone or glasses, though a silver alert noted he may have been carrying a firearm.
[Three other individuals with ties to the same high-security ecosystem in New Mexico have also vanished: Anthony Chavez: A former employee of Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) who went missing in May 2025 while out for a walk; Melissa Casias: An administrative assistant at LANL who disappeared in June 2025. Investigations later revealed her mobile devices had been wiped clean at the time she vanished; and Steven Garcia: A contractor for the National Nuclear Security Administration facility in Albuquerque who has not been seen since August 2025.
[In California, the disappearance of Monica Jacinto Reza in June 2025 added a layer of technical concern to the pattern. Reza was a senior aerospace engineer and a leading expert in advanced rocket propulsion. She co-invented “Mondaloy,” a specialized superalloy intended to replace foreign components in next-generation U.S. rocket engines. Reza vanished while hiking in the Angeles National Forest, reportedly just yards away from other hikers. Her professional work had indirect links to the aerospace research structures once overseen by General McCasland.
[The list also includes scientists who were victims of high-profile homicides or unexplained deaths: Nuno Loureiro: The head of MIT’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center, a world authority on fusion energy, was fatally shot at his home in late 2025; Carl Grillmair: A Caltech astrophysicist known for tracking stellar streams and asteroids, who was shot on his porch in February 2026; Amy Eskridge: A researcher recently added to the list of suspicious cases involving advanced aerospace and “antigravity” concepts; Frank Maiwald and Michael David Hicks: Researchers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory who died under circumstances that, while officially attributed to natural causes or undisclosed reasons, have been scrutinized due to their timing alongside the other cases.
[Earlier this month, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed that the Trump administration is working with the FBI and the Department of Energy to “holistically review” these cases. While some officials maintain that these incidents are a tragic statistical cluster—citing personal motives in the Loureiro homicide and medical issues in others—lawmakers like Missouri Representative Eric Burlison have pressed for federal intervention. The inquiry aims to determine if these scientists were targets of foreign espionage or if their research into sensitive aerospace and nuclear technologies made them vulnerable in a rapidly escalating global arms race.
[Skeptics and some Department of Energy officials have noted that with over 20,000 employees at these labs, a cluster of deaths (some confirmed as natural or random homicides, like Carl Grillmair) is statistically possible.
[On April 22, Boulder police issued a statement confirming the death of 53-year-old David Wilcock, a prominent UFO researcher and paranormal author. According to the report, law enforcement arrived at a residence following calls regarding a person in a mental health crisis. Upon arrival, deputies encountered Wilcock outside the home while he was armed. The release noted that he turned the weapon on himself shortly after their arrival and was declared dead at the scene. Wilcock years ago had written a note saying he was not suicidal.]


