Sure, let's open the files
Of course, I’m willing to believe in the occasional visits from Unidentified Flying Objects. At the risk of replaying a Twilight Zone episode, I’m only disappointed that the visitors sophisticated enough to have superior technology aren’t making more formal contact.
I’m
just not willing to believe that the U.S. Congress, which is kicking up a
renewed fuss about whether the government is squashing reports about UFO
sightings, is ready to do anything about acknowledging ET.
For once, we can say with confidence, we had an issue arise before the Republican-led House Oversight Committee this week that drew equal skepticism and dismay from both sides of the political aisle.
Perhaps we should thank the
apparently pending alien invasion for briefly halting endless, nonsensical
culture war skirmishes over every public issue in sight.
At
least they could provide a common target.
Admittedly,
when I heard about a hearing to air grievances about hiding our X Files, I had
expected Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida to attack the hearings for even
mentioning that there may be lifeforms whose presence might make Americans feel
bad, or Donald Trump to announce – without evidence again – those aliens had
taken over prosecutor bodies in the Justice Department.
Then
Joe Biden could say that he has separated himself from any personal influence
over alien visits, and Homeland Security could insist that we have adequate
defenses against alien invasion – unless the conservative majority of the
Supreme Court says that non-humans are not addressed in the Constitution,
leaving it to each state to respond separately.
But there it was, a formal House committee hearing in which a former national intelligence official told elected representatives that the U.S. government is sheltering alien spacecraft, that sightings are more numerous than believed, and that we’ve been sitting on the information.
Just why the secrecy was not
addressed, and The New York Times, which has written more
seriously about UFOs than most, said the hearing exhibited “the extraordinary
standards of contemporary political theater.”
They Have Visited
OK,
the hearing allowed lawmakers to denounce in turn decades of undue secrecy
about the various intercepts and studies of unexplained phenomena that
irregularly are ruled upon investigation often to be weather artifacts or
errant aircraft, particularly from perceived human enemy countries. And we
could revisit all our movie-spawned curiosity about Area 51, Roswell, New
Mexico, and Martian visitors.
Retired
Maj. David Grush, a former U.S. intelligence official who has worked with the
government’s Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force to investigate reports of
strange flying objects let everyone know that the government’s
been keeping secrets. Under questioning, he said there have been lots of
contacts with UFOs, crashes, and that non-human biological remains have been
studied.
It
was just the kind of testimony that buttresses decades of speculation among the
UFO-wary of secret bases to hold physical remains of Space Visitors.
He
also said that the Pentagon’s efforts are aimed at reverse engineering the
technology of any UFOs we happen across.
Of
course, he hadn’t seen any of this himself, but he had heard
from people who had. And he was, well, shy of much detail or specific evidence
– never a problem for this version of the House Oversight Committee which is
used to denouncing things for which it has no evidence. He also said he
couldn’t get into any specific incidents in public, likely because the reports
have been stamped classified.
Two
other Navy pilots also testified about encounters with fast-moving UFOs. They
said they reported the sightings to the Pentagon’s Advanced Aerospace Threat
Identification Program, which analyzes the incidents for explanations.
But
the main thrust here was that this information has been withheld from Congress
and the rest of us. Little seems to move Congress more than believing that
information it is due has been withheld.
Naturally,
that leads to the next question, Congress: What do you want to do about it.
I’m
still confused about why all this wants to be kept secret. Is any of it true?
Don’t other world governments have the same information? Is it secret because
we fear an interstellar military? Is there something here that would
unduly alarm us, or have we just become so used to classifying everything from
briefing agendas to state dinner menus that we can’t break the habit to find
out that there is life beyond Earth?
As
far as we can tell, secrecy itself seems the current target.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has legislation with Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Mike Rounds, R-S. Dak., to create a commission with authority to declassify government documents about extraterrestrial matters. It is a proposed amendment to the national defense bill.
The backers say they are
as interested in rejecting conspiracy theories that surround UFO discussions as
clearing the air about hiding startling discoveries. House Republicans included
a similar directive in its version of the bill.
OK,
maybe that forces the Pentagon to cough up more records of sightings more
often.
Then
what?
This
Congress – like those before it — can’t even agree on moving intelligently
towards renewable energy sources over reliance on fossil fuels that seem to be
ruining the planet. This is the House Republican caucus that is promising to
cancel investments in space that it insisted on a couple of years ago.
This
is a Congress that can’t address national immigration or health care or the
need to invest even in building computer chips.
Is
this the body that is going to devise whether we offer a welcome mat or a
clenched fist to those capable of interstellar travel?
I’m
all in favor of lifting the secrecy here and I love that the Pentagon and
Congress want to be serious about questions about non-human life, but one must
wonder what the goal is.
Terry H. Schwadron
retired as a senior editor at The New York Times, Deputy Managing Editor at The
Los Angeles Times and leadership jobs at The Providence (RI) Journal-Bulletin.
He was part of a Pulitzer Gold Medal team in Los Angeles, and his team part of
several Pulitzers in New York. As an editor, Terry created new approaches in
newsrooms, built technological tools and digital media. He pursued efforts to
recruit and train minority journalists and in scholarship programs. A resident
of Harlem, he volunteers in community storytelling, arts in education programs,
tutoring and is an active freelance trombone player.