![]() ![]() "But would I leave it for something that I truly think can change the world and have a positive impact and make it a better place, and something that needs to be dealt with, something that's serious?"ĭeLonge, 44, says he realises the theory of UAP might be "unnerving" and "hard to digest" for some, but that he wants to be "in the front seat of something that's going to come out and be the most revolutionary subject".įollowing the launch of Unidentified last year, the show is now back for a second series. "Would I leave rock and roll just to go do something that there's no data for and it's just, like, pie in the sky and we're just imagining things? No! Why would I? I mean, that's insane. ![]() "I've been brought into a group of people and I'm a big part of a mechanism that is absolutely profound and already started changing the world. None.Image: Blink-182 headlined Reading and Leeds in 2014 Some of these papers are available on line, while others have not been released (). ![]() Hal Puthoff) and "Invisibility Cloaking" (Dr. The only thing that AATIP can be shown to have produced are 38 papers on weird science, with titles like "Advanced Space Propulsion Based on Vacuum" (Dr. What was the actual purpose of AATIP/AAWSAP? Was it really a UFO investigation program? Despite nonstop claims from Luis Elizondo, Tom DeLonge, and others that AATIP was a government program to study UFOs (or "UAPs"-Unidentified Aerial Phenomena-as they prefer to call them), all attempts to document that claim have failed. The Pentagon's 38 papers on Weird Science ) And this is just a fraction of the confusion surrounding this story. Mick West made an excellent video explaining what these Navy videos probably are. (The Navy finally did officially release these three videos on April 27, 2020, although they didn't provide any additional information. We don't know who the leaker is, although we can have our suspicions. Exactly.Īs well, the Navy never "released" any of those videos to the public, as To The Stars has been claiming. The Navy is pointedly not saying the objects are flying saucers or otherwise controlled by aliens" (). It's only at the bottom of the article that we read, "the Pentagon says the aerial objects in the videos are simply unidentified, and for now, unexplained. And they were never meant to be released to the public." The headline is misleading. For example, on September 16, 2019, Popular Mechanics reported that "The Navy Says Those UFO Videos Are Real. Navy "admit that UFOs are real"? Many news stories claimed that they did. (And yes, this is the same Hal Puthoff who, with Russell Targ, tested Uri Geller at SRI back in the 1970s.)įor starters, did the U.S. Or was it AAWSAP (Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications)? Even TTSA's people can't agree whether or not these two acronyms represent the same program: John Greenewald of The Black Vault noted that Hal Puthoff of To The Stars Academy, as well as the Pentagon, say that AATIP and AAWSAP were the same program, while Luis Elizondo, also of To The Stars Academy, insists they were not. What we know is that in 2008 former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid arranged for the Pentagon to give a $22 million contract to his friend and campaign contributor Robert Bigelow, under a program called AATIP (Advanced Aviation Threat Identification Program). ![]() However, as skeptics have so often found, much of what the media reports is inaccurate, incomplete, or just plain false. If news headlines are to be believed, TTSA has revealed that the government has been operating a secret UFO investigation program, has "released" UFO videos, and "admitted" that UFOs are real. FOR MORE THAN TWO YEARS AN ORGANIZATION CALLED To The Stars Academy (TTSA), founded by rock singer and Blink-182 front man Tom DeLonge, has sucked the oxygen out of all other discussions of UFO-related matters. ![]()
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