Less than a week ago, whistleblowers in Congress rekindled the notion that high levels of government are concealing evidence of nonhuman intelligent beings and the mystifying vehicles they pilot.
Now, the leader of the Pentagon's office to investigate UFOs is set to provide congressional testimony of his own.
That agency, the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO,) came under heavy fire last Wednesday when a quartet of witnesses appeared before a House committee for its latest foray into the topic of UFOs.
Many sightings AARO has historically investigated are reported by military fighter pilots, some of whom have captured footage on jets' cockpit gun cameras of unidentified anomalous phenomena, or UAP. The acronym has come to be the government's preferred term for what is still largely known among the public as UFOs, both because it's less stigmatized and because it includes objects seen in not just the air, but the water.