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Trump Demands UFO Secrets Unveiled, Sparks Accountability Move

Dr. Steven Greer’s appearance on Newsmax’s Finnerty this week lit a fuse under a story the mainstream tried to laugh off for years: that powerful elements inside our government have been sitting on material about unidentified aerial phenomena and, according to Greer, whole aircraft so large they required hangars to conceal them. Rather than bowing to the permanent Washington cover-up, Greer used the platform to press hard that whistleblowers and insiders want these truths out into the open for the American people to see.

Missouri Rep. Eric Burlison joined the segment and reinforced the urgency, saying he’s been blocked from classified sites but has reasons to believe very large craft have been secured in secret locations overseas and stateside. Greer went further, naming a source who allegedly referenced a craft so large in the mountains outside Seoul that a structure had to be built around it, and even hinted at a concealed site near Fort Sill, Oklahoma—claims that demand oversight, not sneers.

The political context shifted wildly when Lara Trump suggested on a podcast that President Trump has a prepared speech about extraterrestrial life ready to be delivered at the right moment, a hint that the White House may be more open to disclosure than past administrations. Whether that speech emerges or not, the whisper from inside Trump circles energized a movement long denied by career bureaucrats and politicized scientists.

Then President Trump himself stepped into the breach and ordered agencies to begin identifying and releasing government files related to alien and extraterrestrial life, UAPs, and UFOs—an unmistakable signal that transparency will no longer be a one-way street for the intelligence bureaucracy. This is the kind of bold, no-nonsense action Americans elected him to take: force the paper trail into daylight and let the people judge the balance between secrecy and safety.

Conservatives who love this country should celebrate a president willing to demand answers from the intelligence state instead of reflexively deferring to it. For too long, secrecy has been used as cover for both incompetence and profiteering; releasing files under strict safeguards preserves national security while restoring trust in government by treating citizens like adults who can handle the truth.

Now Congress and patriotic journalists must do their jobs: subpoena what’s withheld, follow the money that greased the cover-ups, and put real witnesses under oath. If there are national-security reasons to redact specific names or technologies, fine—explain them and move on—but the automatic reflex to bury evidence in black budgets and unacknowledged programs must end so hardworking Americans can finally have the transparency they deserve.

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