Pentagon UFO Investigation Also Studied Poltergeists, Invisible Entities And “Strange Creatures”

In years to come, UFO investigators may look back on the Pentagon revelations in the last year as a turning point in government disclosure. Of course, it could also be that this is a clever red herring, a ruse, or a distraction meant to fool the public as usual. Whatever the case, it seems that the government is taking an interest, at least on paper, in some of the higher mysteries of our physical reality. A trove of documents obtained by CBS affiliate KLAS-TV in Las Vegas revealed that the Pentagon’s $22 million UFO program was not only investigating anomalous aerial phenomena, but also warping engines, dark energies and exploring other dimensions.

It doesn’t stop there, it seems. In a page apparently taken from the biggest hits of the X-Files, a spokesperson for one of the Pentagon-funded research programs suggests that the government took an interest in a whole range of paranormal phenomena unrelated to space travel entirely. . The statement was issued by a representative of Bigelow Aerospace Advanced Space Studies (BAASS), a secretive aerospace company headed by conspiracy theory theorist Robert Bigelow, a recurring figure in UFOs and dark government investigative knowledge. According to the statement, KLAS-TV reports that the investigative project touched on a wide range of mysteries:

The BAASS investigations provided new lines of evidence that the UFO phenomenon was much more than crazy machines interacting with military aircraft. The phenomenon also involved a whole panoply of diverse activity including strange creatures, poltergeist activity, unseen entities, orbs of light, animal and human injuries, and much more.

The statement also says that BAASS believes that “the UFO phenomenon was capable of manipulating and distorting human perception” and that the human body can serve “as a reading system to dissect interactions with the UFO phenomenon.” Placing the word “dissect” next to the human body is somewhat mystifying, but macabre puns aside, the statement seems to suggest that a wide range of experimental psychological or medical investigations on human eyewitnesses could have been involved in this. Project.

Do we really want to know how deep this rabbit hole is? After all, it could go anywhere. Is this a distraction meant to discredit the serious study of anomalous aerial phenomena, or could there be some truth hidden in these reports after all?

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