It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Jamongul: Ross Colthart said it would be good to offer a deal to those who kept the program secret. They get some immunity in exchange for getting us the truth. I think he referenced truth and reconciliation. Would you guys back a change dot org style petition for this? Do you think the others would like it?
Lou: Absolutely! I think Ross is 100% correct. I think we need to offer amnesty from, from criminal and civil prosecution, if we want them to come out of the shadows.
There’s a lot of pressure right now, and I'm sure they don't, whoever's part of that, Cabal, doesn't appreciate that type of pressure.
So if we could offer some sort of truth and reconciliation, I think something to that effect, would be very helpful in this cause…and say….look, we’re not going to label you. In fact, we'll give you anonymity and confidentiality.
What we'll do, is we'll, if you provide us this information, we'll make sure that kind of like a witness protection program except for, you know, no one will ever know you’re a part of this except for very few people. I think that's a great idea. I think, I think that's what we should be doing.
originally posted by: introufo
a reply to: Ophiuchus1
I think the Schumer bill includes an amnesty of some sort.
Though, Grusch brought the murder yarn into this, which is kind of rare other than the extreme conspirator's spiels.
There’s no phone number. No email address. Not even a website. More than a year since the Pentagon launched an office to investigate UFO sightings, there is still no hotline for pilots and others to report mysterious objects directly to the investigators.
The reporting issues are highlighting the tensions over gathering data on so-called unidentified anomalous phenomena. Pilots wary they won’t be taken seriously hold back from saying anything. That means information that might identify objects as benign, as foreign surveillance tools or — yes, maybe even something extraterrestrial — simply isn’t in the system and may not be for quite a while.
Americans on the whole have remained largely unmoved by the testimony given at a special hearing of the House Oversight Committee on whether the government was covertly aware or in possession of alien technology and alien life.
According to two polls of 1,500 U.S. adults, conducted on behalf of Newsweek by Redfield & Wilton Strategies before and after the UFO hearing in late July, fewer Americans are now as sure about the claim that the federal government is in possession of an alien craft, and slightly more people now believe that the government knows more than it is letting on.
So how has our society responded? To quote an assessment in Forbes, “the internet shrugged.” After some brief reporting by the major news networks, they returned their attention to nearly full-time coverage of the dismal legal landscapes surrounding Hunter Biden and Donald Trump.
Perhaps the era of fake news has desensitized the public to remarkable revelations like these, so I feel compelled to share my perspective to shed light on their validity and implications.