The Department of Defense’s recent declassification and public posting of UAP files under the new Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters is a wake-up call for every patriotic American who cares about national security. After years of bureaucratic secrecy, the DoD finally put a tranche of records into the public domain, forcing the conversation out of the shadows and into daylight where it belongs.
On Fox’s The Big Weekend Show, Disclosure Foundation executive director Jordan Flowers laid out the obvious truth: these releases are not trivia for conspiracy theorists, they are potential national security nightmares that demand serious oversight. Flowers’ blunt assessment—that raw files without context still raise urgent questions about gaps in protection and accountability—should unsettle anyone who believes the safety of our skies is negotiable.
The records themselves are unnerving, documenting incidents that range from unexplained orbs to close approaches that nearly became tragedies for U.S. aviators, including reports of objects coming within feet of military helicopters. These are not benign weather balloons; they are incidents logged by trained crews and sensors that deserve to be treated as threats until proven otherwise.
Let’s be clear: no patriotic conservative should tolerate a government that hoards information while our pilots risk their lives. For too long, bureaucracy and political theater have put public curiosity ahead of sober security measures, and now Congress must stop playing politics and hold accountable the agencies that failed to warn commanders on the ground. Americans deserve oversight, whistleblower protections, and a full accounting of who knew what and when.
Republican lawmakers who pressured the administration for transparency are right to say there’s more to come, and those promises must translate into real action—hearings, funding for sensor upgrades, and a no-nonsense posture to deter both foreign adversaries and unknown incursions. This is not a sideshow; this is about defense readiness, technological superiority, and the lives of our servicemen and women who fly and patrol American airspace.
Patriots should demand both answers and results: more timely declassifications, better interagency coordination, and a refusal to let ideological inertia or media mockery drown out facts. The release of these files should be the beginning of a campaign to ensure America is safe, informed, and prepared—not the end of a story buried in bureaucratic spin. If our leaders fail to act, voters must remember who treated national security like an afterthought.
