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Government Hiding Alien Secrets for 80 Years? New Film Says Yes

A new documentary called The Age of Disclosure has ripped the veil off decades of bureaucratic secrecy, and hardworking Americans deserve to know what our own government has been hiding. Director Dan Farah’s film claims an 80-year coverup of non-human intelligent life and sets that claim against the backdrop of recent congressional attention to Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena.

Farah didn’t bring on YouTube theorists or tabloid hosts; he sat down with 34 former senior government, military, and intelligence officials who say they have direct knowledge of these programs. Names the public will recognize—from former intelligence leaders to senior Pentagon and NASA figures—appear on camera and speak in no uncertain terms.

The witnesses in the trailer and at SXSW describe a secret, high-stakes effort to collect and reverse-engineer craft not made by humans, even likening it to a Manhattan Project–level initiative with global rivals racing to crack the technology. If true, this is not a harmless curiosity; it is the clearest possible national-security issue of our era, and the American people should not be left out of the conversation.

Conservatives should be the loudest demanders of the truth here — not because it’s fashionable, but because secrecy breeds corruption and risk. The film arrives after bipartisan congressional hearings and even a Senate bill aimed at disclosure, showing that this is one of the few issues that unites elected officials across the aisle and ought to unite patriots who put country over cover-up.

Skeptics in the mainstream media and in parts of the academy will scoff, calling testimony “insufficient” or “unverifiable,” and some critics will try to shove this back into the closet with hand-waving about anecdotes and ratings. That’s exactly why testimony from career intelligence and military professionals matters — they risk reputations and careers to speak out, and their words merit investigation, not ridicule.

Beyond the question of whether non-human intelligence exists, the film raises a harder, uglier one: who has the power to decide what Americans can know, and what technology a secretive few might use to dominate the rest of us? Conservatives rightly worry about foreign actors like China racing for strategic advantage, and we should demand transparency so American innovators and lawmakers can defend our nation first.

The time for moral posturing and bureaucratic platitudes is over. Congress and the next administration should open hearings, subpoena documents, and create a real, public declassification task force so citizens can judge the evidence themselves. Patriots who believe in limited government and national strength should join together now to force accountability, end the culture of secrecy, and put the interests of the American people ahead of whatever shadow programs have been operating behind closed doors.

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