Most of you know me as the guy who posts the Xyzabcrst Files. I spend most of my time at AJnet Magazine reviewing material that, depending on your perspective, is either highly classified or complete nonsense.
But today, I’m stepping away from that format for a minute to talk about something more directly.
We are long overdue for disclosure.
The idea that Earth is the only planet in the universe to produce intelligent life doesn’t hold up. At all. It sounds downright ridiculous when you stop and think about it. We live in a universe with billions of galaxies, each filled with stars and planetary systems. There are more stars in the universe than grains of sand on the Earth’s beaches. The math alone all but disproves the idea that we’re the only ones here. You don’t need to jump to any wild conclusions to realize that the odds of us being alone in the universe aren’t in our favor.
Now layer in human history. Reports of strange encounters, unexplained craft, and beings that don’t fit into any known category go back centuries.
It’s easy to dismiss those encounters as the superstitious people of the past misinterpreting something that they didn’t understand. However, in modern times, these reports have only increased. Abduction claims alone range anywhere from in the thousands to the millions depending on the source. Obviously, not every one of those stories is true. Some are misidentifications, some are fabrications, and some are probably just people trying to make sense of something they didn’t understand.
Here’s the problem though. If even one percent of those reports are legitimate, that’s still a lot. To me, that indicates a pattern. Patterns are something that should be investigated, not dismissed. One percent of a million is ten thousand. If ten thousand people have legitimately reported similar experiences, I think that warrants further investigation.
At the same time, we also have trained military personnel reporting unidentified craft operating in restricted airspace, including around sensitive installations, such as air force bases and nuclear missile silos. These aren’t random people on the internet. These are pilots, radar operators, and individuals whose entire job is to identify what’s in the sky and determine whether it’s a threat. When those people say they’re seeing something they can’t explain, that should carry weight.
So either all of this is being misinterpreted at a massive scale, or something is happening that we don’t fully understand. Those are really the only two options, and one of them deserves a lot more attention than it’s getting.
The obvious question is, why has none of this been clearly addressed?
Well, I think that part of the answer to that question lies in an uncomfortable truth.
The moment the government acknowledges that people are being taken against their will by aliens, they’re also admitting that they can’t stop it. Governments would be telling their citizens that they’re powerless. That alone is a strong incentive to stay vague, release fragments of information, and avoid any kind of definitive statement.
There are other objections that tend to come up. Religion is one of them, but that argument has never made much sense to me. There’s nothing in any major religious text that explicitly says life cannot exist elsewhere. If anything, it could be seen as evidence that creation is even broader than we understand. Though it would raise some interesting questions. Did Jesus die on the cross for the aliens as well?
Then there’s the question of intent.
Some believe that aliens would be hostile, and want to eradicate humans. If something with the capability to reach this planet wanted us gone, we would already be gone. That doesn’t automatically mean whatever is out there is friendly, but it does suggest that total destruction isn’t the goal. It’s just as plausible that we’re being observed, studied, or interacted with in ways we don’t fully understand yet. Perhaps the Earth is nothing more than a planet-sized terrarium.
It’s also worth considering that not everything we’re seeing is necessarily coming from space.
There have been repeated reports of unidentified craft entering and exiting the ocean, which raises questions about whether some of this activity is happening much closer to home than people assume. Our oceans are vast, and largely unexplored.
On top of that, there are theories involving extradimensional movement that sound far-fetched until you realize we still don’t fully understand the boundaries of our own physics.
A lot of people already believe that something is going on. Even the ones who don’t follow this topic closely tend to believe that there’s more to the story than what we’re being told. The longer that information is kept hidden from us, the more trust erodes. At a certain point, withholding information becomes more destabilizing than releasing it.
There’s been some attempt at partial disclosure. Some material has been released over the past several years, including under President Trump, but most of it has been underwhelming. It raises more questions than it answers, and it feels more like testing the waters than actually informing the public.
We’re past the point where that approach works. No more of this “soft disclosure.” Go hard or go home.
You don’t have to confirm every theory or validate every story, but at some point, you do have to acknowledge what you know. If there are unknown craft operating in our airspace, say that clearly. If there are ongoing investigations into phenomena that don’t have conventional explanations, say that too.
Rip the bandage off and deal with the fallout now.
If something is happening, and enough people already suspect that it is, continuing to pretend otherwise isn’t going to hold much longer.
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We’ll be doing more of these editorials from AJnet staff in the future.