The latest wave of government UFO files has been promoted by some as a step toward disclosure while others argue that it still falls short of full transparency. Jeremy talks with Ashton Forbes about what has been released, calls for immunity for whistleblowers, and why certain aspects of the phenomenon are being suppressed. Then we head to New Mexico’s Sandia Mountains where Su Walker discusses the history of sightings that were highlighted in one of the recent document releases and the communications she claims to have with an extraterrestrial race that resides there.
For years, people reporting anomalous health incidents including those associated with Havana Syndrome, were largely dismissed. U.S. intelligence assessments downplayed hundreds of cases, but those conclusions are now facing renewed scrutiny after the Director of National Intelligence rescinded previous findings. Jeremy digs into what has been happening to people with Jesse Beltran and how advanced body-scanning technologies are uncovering foreign bodies in them.
A public health preparedness plan is unveiled during the same week that an advisory council of scientists is formed, a major press conference calls for full disclosure, more UFO files are released and a high-profile motion picture hits theaters. Is it merely coincidence, or could these events be part of a broader effort to prepare the public for an extraordinary reality? Jeremy welcomes Gary Heseltine and Mark Christopher Lee to discuss the film “Disclosure Day”, the broader implications of its plot, whether society is truly ready for disclosure and how we might respond if the truth were finally revealed.